• Am J Psychiatry · May 1993

    Missed psychiatric appointments: who returns and who stays away.

    • L F Sparr, M C Moffitt, and M F Ward.
    • Outpatient Psychiatry Section, VA Medical Center, Portland, OR 97207.
    • Am J Psychiatry. 1993 May 1; 150 (5): 801-5.

    ObjectiveThis study investigated reasons for missed psychiatric appointments, rescheduling of appointments, adverse outcomes, and the association of specific diagnoses and treatments with missed appointments.MethodA prospective survey covering all individual outpatient visits to seven mental health clinic psychiatrists was conducted during a 3-month period in 1991. Of the 1,620 scheduled visits, 142 (8.8%) were missed, representing 130 separate patients. For each missed appointment, the psychiatrist involved completed a questionnaire on the type of visit, the patient's DSM-III-R diagnosis, the reason for missing the appointment, the date of patient recontact, and adverse outcome, if any.ResultsOf the 142 missed appointments, 71.1% were rescheduled spontaneously by the patients; of these, most (73.3%) were rescheduled within 2 weeks. The remaining missed appointments represented various outcomes, including dropping out of treatment. The most common stated reason for missing an appointment was patient error, such as forgetting, oversleeping, or getting the date wrong. Patients with PTSD and/or substance abuse were significantly more likely than others to miss appointments, and those with major depression were somewhat less likely to do so.ConclusionsMost patients quickly reschedule missed appointments, and those in more intensive treatments miss fewer appointments. Missed appointments for initial evaluation are not rescheduled most often. Patients in ongoing treatment who do not return may have histories of noncompliance with treatment. The high rate of rescheduling suggests that follow-up of patients who miss appointments should be a clinical decision rather than a routine policy.

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