AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study examined why patients with mental disorders frequently visit emergency departments, revealing that inadequate outpatient care and insufficient referrals contribute to their high usage of ED services.
  • - Most patients expressed dissatisfaction with the lack of follow-up and referrals after ED visits, despite some feeling content with the immediate care they received.
  • - Barriers include limited primary care clinician expertise and poor follow-up from psychiatrists; the study suggests enhancing collaboration with outpatient services to better manage these patients and reduce ED visits.

Article Abstract

This qualitative study explored reasons for high emergency department (ED) use (3 + visits/year) among 299 patients with mental disorders (MD) recruited in four ED in Quebec, Canada. A conceptual framework including healthcare system and ED organizational features, patient profiles, and professional practice guided the content analysis. Results highlighted insufficient access to and inadequacy of outpatient care. While some patients were quite satisfied with ED care, most criticized the lack of referrals or follow-up care. Patient profiles justifying high ED use were strongly associated with health and social issues perceived as needing immediate care. The main barriers in professional practice involved lack of MD expertise among primary care clinicians, and insufficient follow-up by psychiatrists in response to patient needs. Collaboration with outpatient care may be prioritized to reduce high ED use and improve ED interventions by strengthening the discharge process, and increasing access to outpatient care.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10597-024-01239-wDOI Listing

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