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The reMAP project: A retrospective, 15‐year register study on inpatient care for youth with mental disorders
Author(s) -
Ostinelli Edoardo G.,
Cavallotti Simone,
Fanti Valentina,
Demartini Benedetta,
Gambini Orsola,
D'Agostino Armando
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
early intervention in psychiatry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.087
H-Index - 45
eISSN - 1751-7893
pISSN - 1751-7885
DOI - 10.1111/eip.12899
Subject(s) - medicine , eating disorders , intervention (counseling) , psychiatry , mental health , personality disorders , epidemiology , pediatrics , personality , psychology , social psychology
Aim We aimed to characterize youth hospitalization trends in a psychiatric inpatient unit from a large, public university hospital with a broad catchment area in Milan, Italy. Methods Hospitalization data of patients with an age at admission ≤ 35 were retrospectively retrieved over a time span of 15 years. The sample was comprised of 1982 admissions to a psychiatric ward, aggregated into ICD‐10 diagnostic clusters and then analysed. We investigated the epidemiological trends with a focus on age at admission, gender, nationality and hospitalization rates, length of stay and “revolving door” readmissions within a year. Results Hospitalization rates increased for eating Disorders and decreased for non‐affective psychotic disorders; median length of stay generally decreased; hospitalization rates for foreign youth increased, in particular for those diagnosed with non‐affective psychotic disorders, personality disorders, and substance‐related and addictive disorders. The revolving door phenomenon was also associated with non‐affective psychoses and neurodevelopmental disorders, while found to increase for eating disorders. Conclusions Hospitalization patterns reflect the general increase of foreign youth in the suburban tissue of a large metropolitan area like Milan. However, our data might underestimate the constant growth of mental health problems in foreign youth due to a generally lower access to services. Novel pharmacological treatments and early intervention programs might explain the decrease of hospitalization duration and hospitalization rate for youth with non‐affective psychoses. The observed increase in hospitalization for young patients with eating disorders sustains the development of adequate policies tailored towards specialty wards.

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