General hospital psychiatry
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The Mini-Mental Status Examination (MMSE) is a brief, structured test of cognitive function. The test is often used as a screening or case-finding instrument for the detection of organic mental disorders or cognitive impairment. However, many clinicians incorporate the MMSE into their clinical mental status examination. ⋯ Scores are interpreted in terms of their consistency or inconsistency with a prior diagnostic impression. This takes prior clinical information and clinical judgment into account. Although different from the traditional way of interpreting the MMSE, the proposed method can be implemented on an intuitive level and does not require mathematical calculations, which are inconvenient at the bedside.
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The utilization of psychiatric crisis teams in urban hospitals is well documented. However, little is reported describing patients who use crisis teams in suburban general hospital emergency rooms. This is a descriptive survey of 1707 suburban patient visits. ⋯ A regression model is used to analyze the duration of service time and utilization patterns in relation to eight variables: season, month, day, shift, diagnosis, method of payment, age, and disposition. Five predictors are identified as significantly relating to the duration of the psychiatric consultation process. These predictors may enable hospital administrators and medical staff to plan and implement psychiatric emergency room care.