General hospital psychiatry
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Gen Hosp Psychiatry · Mar 2003
ReviewResearch to improve the quality of care for depression: alternatives to the simple randomized clinical trial.
Recognition of gaps between evidence gained from mental health research and clinical practice in the community together with changes in treatment patterns and patient/provider preferences for care have led to interest in enhancements in the designs and analyses of clinical and community trials of mental health interventions. Gaps between clinical trials and community care include differences in populations and treatment strategies. To bridge these gaps, we propose enhancing the simple randomized trial with several different designs with the immediate aims of improving patient recruitment and adherence in psychiatric intervention studies thus bringing study designs more in line with clinical practice. ⋯ In this discussion, we address design and analytic issues with respect to a number of enhancements of the randomized trial design, including partial patient-provider preference designs, randomized encouragement and consent designs, fixed adaptive design, and random between- and within-patient adaptive designs. Each has advantages and disadvantages depending on the effect under investigation. Some of these enhancements, such as the fixed adaptive design, have begun to be implemented in effectiveness trials in mental health services research, but all are worthy of more attention.
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Gen Hosp Psychiatry · Jan 2003
The impact of psychiatric comorbidity on length of stay of medical inpatients.
The aim of the study was to determine the impact of psychiatric comorbidity (PC) on length of hospital stay (LOS) of medical inpatients. A prospective cohort study was conducted. A series of 317 medical inpatients consecutively admitted to the general medical wards of a University Hospital composed the sample, after excluding those who refused or who could not be evaluated due to their physical illnesses or treatments (n=78). ⋯ After controlling for confounders (age and physical severity), in the multivariate analysis of covariance, the patients with cognitive impairment had a significantly prolonged LOS (F=17.8; P<.01) compared with those without cognitive impairment. No difference existed in LOS for the patients with depressive disorders (F=0.36; P=.55), Anxiety disorders (F=1.48; P=.22) or Substance related disorders (F=1.05; P=.30). These results suggest an independent effect of cognitive impairment increasing LOS of medical inpatients.
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Gen Hosp Psychiatry · Nov 2002
Case ReportsSickle cell disease -- when opioids and physicians fail.
An interview with a 32-year-old male with sickle cell anemia and multiple sequential admissions for vaso-occlusive crises, receiving high dose narcotic analgesics, is presented. The subsequent clinical discussion outlines psychiatric, psychosocial and treatment issues. Management of acute vaso-occlusive crisis is summarized along with a discussion of the value of comprehensive care for sickle cell disease patients. This article will be useful to physicians and consultation-liaison psychiatrists treating patients with sickle cell disease as well as policy makers developing service delivery models for this population.
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Gen Hosp Psychiatry · Jul 2002
Historical ArticleAlcohol prescription by surgeons in the prevention and treatment of delirium tremens: historic and current practice.
Beer, other alcohol beverages, and IV alcohol are still used to prevent or treat alcohol withdrawal delirium on surgical services. The history of the use of alcohol by surgeons may play a role in its continued use for withdrawal. In this policy survey 32 inpatient hospital pharmacies were called and asked if alcohol was available, if it was used to treat alcohol withdrawal, and the medical specialties that requested it. ⋯ One half of the 32 hospitals surveyed had alcoholic beverages available for patient use and eleven hospitals used either package alcohol or IV alcohol in the treatment of alcohol withdrawal. Surgeons used alcohol before anesthesia to help patients tolerate procedures, and the use of alcohol for treatment of alcohol withdrawal still appears in the surgical literature. This preliminary survey indicates that some hospitals still provide beverage alcohol for the treatment of alcohol withdrawal and that surgeons are the specialty ordering alcohol for their patients.
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The aim of this study was to identify psychiatric and somatic risk factors associated with the development, severity and duration of postoperative delirium after vascular surgery. Forty-seven patients underwent aortic, carotid artery and peripheral artery surgery. Both, surgeon and psychiatrist, monitored patients preoperatively with daily follow up. ⋯ A statistical analysis was performed using multivariate regression analyses to find factors significantly associated with delirium development, severity, and duration. Thirty-six percent of the patients developed postoperative delirium after surgery. Comparison of different parameters revealed that especially preoperative depression symptoms and perioperative transfusions/infusions had significant predictive value for the development as well as for the severity of postoperative delirium.