Title of article :
The new asylums in the community: severely ill psychiatric
patients living in psychiatric supported housing facilities.
A Danish register-based study of prognostic factors, use
of psychiatric services, and mortality
Author/Authors :
Merete Nordentoft، نويسنده , , Marianne G. Pedersen، نويسنده , ,
Carsten B. Pedersen، نويسنده , , S?ren Blinkenberg، نويسنده , , Preben B. Mortensen، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
Abstract :
Introduction Reorganization of psychiatric treatment in
Denmark involved a declining number of psychiatric longstay
beds and an increasing number of psychiatric supported
housing facilities in the community. Very few
studies have focused on the population in such facilities.
Methods Information was generated combining addresses
of supported psychiatric housing facilities with information
from the Danish Civil Registration System to create a case
register of persons living in supported psychiatric housing
facilities. Through linkage with the Danish Psychiatric
Central Register, we examined predictors of becoming a
resident in a psychiatric housing facility, use of psychiatric
services around the time of entrance to a supported psychiatric
housing facility, and mortality rates for residents in
a psychiatric housing facility compared to non-residents
and to persons in the general population who never experienced
a psychiatric admission.
Results We identified schizophrenia as the strongest
diagnostic predictor of becoming a resident in a supported
psychiatric housing facility, followed by organic mental
disorders, substance abuse, and affective disorder. In
addition, the higher the number of psychiatric bed days, the
higher the risk. Compared to the years before the first
entrance to a supported psychiatric housing facility, the
number of bed days in the year following the first entrance
dropped more among residents than among comparable
psychiatric patients. Mortality rates were slightly higher
among residents in a supported psychiatric housing facility
than among comparable psychiatric patients, but more than
tenfold higher when compared to the general population of
Danes.
Conclusion The vast majority of persons who became
residents in supported psychiatric housing facilities had
previously been diagnosed with schizophrenia, schizophrenia-
like disorders, and organic mental disorders, and a large
proportion had substance abuse and a high use of bed days.
Moving into such a facility reduced the number of bed days
Keywords :
Schizophrenia Substance misuse Epidemiology Institutions Organization
Journal title :
Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology (SPPE)
Journal title :
Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology (SPPE)