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The characteristics, management and outcomes of people identified with mental health issues in an emergency department, Melbourne, Australia
Author(s) -
SHAFIEI T.,
GAYNOR N.,
FARRELL G.
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
journal of psychiatric and mental health nursing
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.69
H-Index - 63
eISSN - 1365-2850
pISSN - 1351-0126
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-2850.2010.01632.x
Subject(s) - emergency department , mental health , medicine , psychosocial , triage , psychiatry , medical emergency
Accessible summary•  The number of people with mental health problems presenting to Australian emergency departments (ED) is increasing as a result of the integration of psychiatric services with general health services. •  Information on all adults aged 18–65 years old who attended an ED over 2 months with an ED discharge diagnosis of a mental health diagnosis was collected. •  Mental health patients who were intoxicated, those who arrived after hours, or patients admitted to a mental health ward were more likely to stay longer than 8 h in the ED. •  Overall, mental health patients were likely to stay longer than 8 h in the ED compared with non‐mental health patients.Abstract Although the number of mental health presentations to emergency departments is increasing as a result of the integration of psychiatric services with general services, few studies have explored the characteristics of mental health patients presenting to emergency departments in Australia. This study investigated the characteristics of, and outcomes in relation to, people presenting with a mental health problem to one large metropolitan emergency department. Data were collected from the emergency department's electronic records system for adult patients aged 18–65 years old with an emergency department discharge diagnosis of a mental health disorder, including substance abuse and psychosocial crisis, for two months. Mental health patients totalled 5.3% ( n = 290) of adult presentations to the emergency department. Over half were male; mean age 37.4 years; 49% were allocated triage category 3/urgent; 45% arrived by ambulance; 39% were overdosed/intoxicated and 55% received one or more diagnostic investigations. Patients who were intoxicated, those who arrived after hours, or patients admitted to a mental health ward were more likely to wait longer than 8 h. Findings are broadly in line with that reported for other Australian studies, although the present findings suggest that patients had significantly more routine investigations and there were higher rates of presentations for ‘intoxication’.

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