Early Psychosis Intervention Program Found to Increase Patient Contact With Psychiatrists, Reduce Mortality

People experiencing psychosis for the first time who used an early psychosis intervention (EPI) program in London, Ontario, had substantially lower rates of mortality in the two-year period after EPI program admission than those who did not use these services, according to astudy published today inAJP in Advance. The findings add to growing evidence of the value of early psychosis intervention services to connect patients with care and improve health outcomes.In the current study, Kelly K. Anderson, Ph.D., of the University of Western Ontario in Canada and colleagues examined the real-world effectiveness of a well-established EPI program over a 17-year period using linked health administrative data. They compared various health outcomes (such as rates of self-harm, suicide, and all-cause mortality) and use of health services (including primary care, outpatient psychiatry, and inpatient hospitalizations) by people who were using EPI services with a matched group of control subjects who were not accessing EPI services.The authors found that in the first two years following admission, EPI service users were six times more likely to have had contact with a psychiatrist and had a more rapid time to the first psychiatric contact after program admission (an average of 13 days compared with 78 days for EPI nonusers). EPI service users were less likely to visit the emergency department compared with nonusers, but this group had higher rates of hospitalization.There were no differ...
Source: Psychiatr News - Category: Psychiatry Tags: ajp in advance early psychosis intervention first-episode psychosis hospitalizations Kelly K. Anderson mortality rate Source Type: research