Thyroid function screening of psychiatric inpatient admissions: A worthwhile procedure?

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Abstract

A thyroid function screening programme of admissions to a general psychiatric service was established. Over a 22-week period 588 patients were admitted and thyroid function tests were performed on 336, a screening rate of 57.1%. Initial investigation showed that 21.3% had a total thyroxine outside the range 75-130 nmol/l. On further investigation only 9 patients (1 thyrotoxic, 8 hypothyroid) had confirmed thyroid disease. In 7 of the 9 patients the disease has been clinically suspected. Thus the screening programme identified only 2 unsuspected cases of thyroid dysfunction and we conclude that this level of detection does not warrant a formal screening programme.

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Bannister, P., Mortimer, A., Shapiro, L., & Simms, A. C. P. (1987). Thyroid function screening of psychiatric inpatient admissions: A worthwhile procedure? Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine, 80(2), 77–78. https://doi.org/10.1177/014107688708000206

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