AI Article Synopsis

  • Psychiatric decision units (PDUs) have been established to alleviate the burden on inpatient services and reduce wait times for patients in mental health crises.
  • The first national survey revealed that PDUs in England operate 24/7, mainly accept voluntary patients, and typically allow stays of 12-72 hours with a high staff-to-patient ratio.
  • Significant variations in the structure and functions of PDUs suggest that best practices are not yet determined, highlighting the need for further research on their effectiveness in mental health crisis care.

Article Abstract

Psychiatric decision units have been developed in many countries internationally to address the pressure on inpatient services and dissatisfactory, long waits people in mental health crisis can experience in emergency departments. Research into these units lags behind their development, as they are implemented by healthcare providers to address these problems. This is the first-ever national survey to identify their prevalence, structure, activities, and contextual setting within health services, in order to provide a robust basis for future research. The response rate was high (94%), and six PDUs in England were identified. The results indicated that PDUs open 24/7, accept only voluntary patients, provide recliner chairs for sleeping rather than beds, and limit stays to 12-72 hours. PDUs are predominantly staffed by senior, qualified mental health nurses and healthcare assistants, with psychiatry input. Staff:patient ratios are high (1:2.1 during the day shift). Differences in PDU structure and activities (including referral pathway, length of stay, and staff:patient ratios) were identified, suggesting the optimal configuration for PDUs has not yet been established. Further research into the efficacy of this innovation is needed; PDUs potentially have a role in an integrated crisis care pathway which provides a variety of care options to service users.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/inm.12849DOI Listing

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