Background: Psychiatric and substance use problems are commonly found to be contributing factors to frequent Emergency Department (ED) use, yet little research has focused on the association between substance use and psychiatric comorbidity. This study assesses the association of a psychiatric comorbidity on (ED) use among patients with substance use disorders (SUDs).
Methods: The study focuses on 6,865 patients who were diagnosed with SUDs in the ED of a large urban hospital in the southern United States from January 1994 - June 1998.
Objectives: This article describes differences in hospitalization for diabetes among persons with diabetes who did or did not have co-occurring mental illness and who presented in the emergency department of a large county hospital located in the Southwest.
Methods: Four and a half years of administrative data were used and consisted of all emergency visits for diabetes (N = 4,275) made by persons with and without co-occurring mental disorders. The dependent variable was whether the emergency visit resulted in hospitalization.
Ten normal subjects were scanned identically at three separate sites (Little Rock, Houston, and New Orleans) to evaluate the reproducibility of brain metabolite ratios in single-voxel (1)H point-resolved spectroscopy sequence (PRESS) magnetic resonance (MR) spectroscopy in vivo. All scans were processed by a single individual at a single site. Coefficients of variation of the measured metabolite ratios generally were in the range found for previous single-voxel, single-site reproducibility studies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStudy Objective: This study assesses the relationship between substance abuse comorbidity and emergency department use among patients with psychiatric disorders in a large academic medical center.
Methods: Data were obtained from an administrative database including every patient visit to the ED of a large, academically affiliated county hospital from January 1994 through June 1998. This study focuses on 12,212 patients who were given a diagnosis of a primary psychiatric disorder in the ED.