Characteristics and dispositional determinants of psychiatric emergencies in a University Hospital in Beirut
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Elsevier B.V.
Abstract
Mental health problems are common in Lebanon, and so are psychiatric emergencies. In order to show the characteristics of psychiatric emergencies in Lebanon along with their dispositional determinants, we conducted this retrospective, single-center, chart-review study of patients who presented to the Emergency Department between July 1, 2016 until December 31, 2016 and required an official psychiatrist consultation. Our sample included 195 patients of all age groups. The most common diagnosis was depression (75 patients) followed by anxiety (61 patients). 107 patients (54.8%) required admission for adequate treatment; however only 72 (67.3%) of those were actually admitted, and the rest (32.7%) left the hospital against medical advice. Increased hospital admission was associated with being a female (OR = 3.042), having family history of psychiatric disease (OR = 2.040) and having suicidal ideations (OR = 12.949). In a country that has inadequate health coverage, financial coverage can also be a determining factor in whether or not patients get the admission they need. © 2019 Elsevier B.V.
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Disposition, Emergency department, Lebanon, Mental health, Psychiatric emergencies, Adolescent, Adult, Anxiety disorders, Depressive disorder, Disease susceptibility, Emergency service, hospital, Female, Hospitals, university, Humans, Insurance coverage, Insurance, health, Male, Mental disorders, Middle aged, Patient admission, Retrospective studies, Suicidal ideation, Young adult, Anxiety, Article, Consultation, Controlled study, Depression, Emergency ward, Family history, Hospital admission, Human, Major clinical study, Mental disease, Mental patient, Patient care, Patient disposition, Priority journal, Psychiatric emergency, Retrospective study, Sex difference, Anxiety disorder, Disease predisposition, Economics, Health insurance, Hospital emergency service, Insurance, University hospital