Objective: This retrospective study aimed to evaluate the impact of introducing crisis intervention patterns in the emergency unit of a general hospital on the number of admissions and outpatient follow-ups for patients with major depressive disorder. Method: The study included all patients with major depressive disorder (DSM-IV criteria) who visited the psychiatric emergency unit in a general hospital during two 8-month periods: before (425 patients) and after (436 patients) crisis interventions were introduced. Results: After crisis interventions were introduced, the voluntary admission rate decreased significantly (from 17.9% to 12.4%), while the number of outpatient follow-ups increased (from 82.1% to 86.2%). Borderline personality disorder was associated with a significant reduction of the admission rate (27.8% against 3 8.2%), while the admission rate for patients with depressive disorder with psychotic features did not decline after crisis interventions. Crisis interventions were more effective on women. Conclusions: These outcomes suggest the relevance of crisis intervention in psychiatric emergency settings to improve the management of patients with major depressive disorder. Crisis intervention fosters outpatient multimodal follow-up rather than admission in a psychiatric setting. (English) [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
CITATION STYLE
Damsa, C., Lazignac, C., Cailhol, L., Di Clémente, T., Haupert, J., & Pull, C. (2005). Troubles dépressifs majeurs et urgences psychiatriques: Une étude naturaliste concernant la place des interventions de crise. The Canadian Journal of Psychiatry, 50(13), 857–862. https://doi.org/10.1177/070674370505001309
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