Title of article :
The Relationship Between Outpatient Visits and Time to Readmission of Psychiatric Inpatients: An 8-Year Follow-Up Study
Author/Authors :
Haghshenas ، Mandana Mental Health Research Center - Iran University of Medical Sciences , Shahsavaripoor ، Behnoosh Mental Health Research Center - Iran University of Medical Sciences , AhmadzadAsl ، Masoud Department of Psychiatry - Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre , kheiry ، Maryam Non-Communicable Diseases Research Center - Ilam University of Medical sciences , Shariati ، Behnam Department of Psychiatry - Mental Health Research Center, Psychosocial Health Research Institue, School of Medicine - Iran University of Medical Sciences , Davoudi ، Farnoush Preventive Medicine and Public Health Research Center, Psychosocial Health Research Institute, Community and Family Medicine Department, School of Medicine - Iran University of Medical Sciences , Naserbakht ، Morteza Department of Psychiatry - Mental Health Research Center, Psychosocial Health Research Institue, School of Medicine - Iran University of Medical Sciences
Abstract :
Introduction: Readmission is an important indicator of poor post-discharge management for psychiatric patients. This study explores the factors influencing psychiatric patient readmission, with a focus on post-discharge follow-up visits. Materials Methods: This retrospective cohort study analyzed the clinical records of psychiatric inpatients over an eight-year period up to 2019. The relationship between various clinical factors during hospitalization (e.g., length of stay, diagnosis, treatment adherence) and post-discharge follow-up leading to readmission was assessed using Kaplan-Meier survival analysis, Log-rank test, and Cox regression analysis. Results: The study revealed a 23% readmission rate. Gender, education, length of hospital stay, number of previous hospitalizations, and restraint during hospitalization showed significant associations with post-discharge visits (P 0.05). Gender, place of hospitalization, and type of discharge were related to the timing of the first post-discharge visit (P 0.05). Scheduling follow-up visits at discharge was significantly associated with post-discharge follow-up (p = 0.001). Conclusion: To reduce or delay readmissions, the study recommends increasing post-discharge visits, minimizing treating psychiatrists, scheduling outpatient follow-up upon discharge, providing psycho-education at discharge (particularly for women and individuals with higher education), addressing patients who leave against medical advice, and conducting telephone follow-up for high-risk patients.
Keywords :
Patient Readmission , Psychiatry , Risk Factors , Outpatient
Journal title :
Journal of Basic Research in Medical Sciences
Journal title :
Journal of Basic Research in Medical Sciences