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Gen Hosp Psychiatry · Jan 2007
Do psychiatric patients improve their competency to consent to hospitalization after admission? A prospective study in an acute inpatient ward.
- David Fraguas, Fernando García-Solano, Esther Chapela, Sara Terán, Juan José de la Peña, and Alfredo Calcedo-Barba.
- Department of Psychiatry, Hospital General Universitario Gregorio Marañón, 28009 Madrid, Spain. dfraguash@yahoo.es
- Gen Hosp Psychiatry. 2007 Jan 1;29(1):54-62.
ObjectivesCompetency to consent to hospitalization has important clinical and ethical implications. However, there are no follow-up studies that evaluate improvement in competency during psychiatric hospitalization. The authors sought to determine whether patients admitted to a psychiatric ward as incompetent to consent to hospitalization improve their competency during hospitalization.MethodA total of 160 consecutively admitted patients were administered the Competency Questionnaire (CQ), a structured scale designed to assess competency to consent to psychiatric hospitalization. The CQ was administered both upon admission and at discharge. Severity and acuity of the psychiatric disorder were assessed with the Severity of Psychiatric Illness Scale and the Acuity of Psychiatric Illness Scale.ResultsOf the 160 assessed patients, 70 (43.8%) were rated incompetent. Forty-five of these 70 incompetent patients completed the admission-to-discharge follow-up. Twenty-one of these 45 patients (46.6%) remained incompetent at discharge. Participation in the treatment process was the only variable that predicted improvement on competency during hospitalization. Severity of psychiatric illness at admission did not predict improvement on competency.ConclusionsNearly half of the patients who upon admission were incompetent remained incompetent at discharge.
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