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Open AccessShort report

Is psychiatric emergency service (PES) use increasing over time?

Michel Paradis1 email, Carolyn Woogh2 email, Dany Marcotte3 email and Yves Chaput4 email

Department of Psychiatry, University of Montreal teaching hospital (CHUM), Montreal, Quebec, Canada

Department of Psychiatry, Queen's, University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada

Louis-H. Lafontaine Hospital, Montreal, Quebec, Canada

365 rue Normand, Suite 230, Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu, Quebec, J3A 1T6, Canada

author email corresponding author email

International Journal of Mental Health Systems 2009, 3:3doi:10.1186/1752-4458-3-3

Published: 3 February 2009

Abstract

Background

Several recent studies have reported a significant increase in medical emergency department (ED) use for reasons of mental health. The diagnostic profile of these patients however differs from that usually described for patients visiting the psychiatric emergency service (PES). Few studies have specifically focused upon long-term PES utilization rates. Those that do typically present data from the early 80s, suggesting that deinstitutionalization may be an important contributing factor to the increases found. The aim of this study was to assess PES use using a more recent time frame and, the effects of non-specific factors, such as population growth, on this use.

Methods

Visits per year at several different types of PESs were obtained; (a) for an 11-year period at a general hospital PES while the surrounding population remained stable, (b) at that same PES while the catchment area population doubled over a period of a few years, (c) for an 11-year period at two PESs without catchment areas while the surrounding population increased and (d-) for a 12-year period at a PES in a mental health facility while the surrounding population increased. Moderately conservative criteria were used to define either a trend or, a significant increase in utilization rates.

Results

Each site had an inherent, 7 to 15% yearly variability in the number of PES visits. Over time however, only those where the surrounding population increased (either by an increase in the catchment area size or a regional increase in the population census) showed a trend or, a significant increase in utilization rates. These increases however were modest and of the order of 12 to 19%.

Conclusion

Long observation periods are required in order to detect stable changes in PES utilization rates over time. As such, population growth may be but one of several factors underlying these increases. Organizational changes in mental health care delivery in the vicinity of the services that showed an increase could also have contributed. These latter would simply have redistributed (to the PES) the pre existing pool of mental health care patients, resulting in an increase that is more apparent than real.


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