Follow-up Psychiatric Care and Risk of Readmission in Patients with Serious Mental Illness in State Funded or Operated Facilities

AbstractReceipt of outpatient treatment within 30  days of discharge from psychiatric hospitalization is an established quality indicator; however, there is scant, mixed evidence as to whether it reduces the risk of readmission. We evaluated this question in patients hospitalized for schizophrenic, bipolar or depressive disorders using the Mental Health Treatment Episode Data Set (MH-TEDS), comprising patients in state-funded or -operated facilities and programs. We performed a 6-month, retrospective longitudinal cohort study including 44,761 patients with schizophrenic disorders, 45,413 patients with bipolar disorders, and 74,995 patients w ith depressive disorders with an index hospitalization between 2014 and 2018, stratified by whether they had at least one outpatient treatment admission in the first 30 days post-discharge. We used multivariable logistic regression to assess risk of readmission during days 31–180. We found that l ess than 10 percent of patients in the three cohorts received the recommended follow-up outpatient care. Furthermore, we found that schizophrenic and bipolar patients who did receive such care were no less likely to be readmitted than those not receiving such care (AOR = 0.96, 95% CI 0.87–1.06 ; AOR 1.06, 955 CI 0.98–1.14), and patients with depressive disorders receiving such care were more likely to be readmitted (AOR = 1.14, 95% CI 1.07–1.22). Thus, few patients received follow-up outpatient care within 30 days of discharge....
Source: Psychiatric Quarterly - Category: Psychiatry Source Type: research