RESUMEN
BACKGROUND: Psychiatric comorbidities are frequent in patients admitted in general hospital and are associated with greater lengths of stay (LOS). Early consultation-liaison psychiatry (CLP) interventions may reduce the LOS but previous studies were underpowered to allow subgroup analyses and have generally not considered the severity of the condition for which patients were admitted ('disease severity'). AIMS: To investigate the association between the timing of CLP interventions and LOS in a general hospital. METHOD: We retrospectively included 4500 consecutive patients admitted in non-psychiatric wards of a university hospital between 2008 and 2016 who had a first CLP intervention. We used general linear models to examine the association between the referral time, defined as log(days before the consultation)/log(LOS), and log(LOS), adjusting for age, gender, year of admission, place of residence, main psychiatric diagnosis, admission to the intensive care unit (ICU), main physical condition and disease severity. RESULTS: Referral time was associated with log(LOS) (ß = 0.31; P <0.001), notably for older patients (ß = 0.43; P <0.001) and those admitted to the ICU (ß = 0.50; P <0.001), but not for those with psychotic disorders (ß = -0.20; P = 0.10). The association was confirmed when considering the expected LOS for each patient. For instance, for an expected LOS of 10 days, a CLP intervention on day 3 compared with day 6 was associated with a reduction of the actual LOS of 2.4 days. CONCLUSIONS: Earlier CLP interventions were associated with a clinically significant shorter LOS in a large population even after adjusting for disease severity. Early CLP interventions may have benefits for both patients and health-related costs.
RESUMEN
BACKGROUND: Readmission rates are under growing scrutiny as an indicator of quality of care as much as a potential source of savings. Patients with comorbid psychiatric conditions are more likely to be readmitted, so Consultation-Liaison Psychiatry (CLP) may play a role in lowering readmission rates. METHOD: In this retrospective cohort study conducted in a general hospital in Paris, France, all consecutive adult inpatients referred for the first time to CLP from January 2008 to December 2016, were included. The main outcomes were 30-day and 7-day readmissions in the same hospital, excluding iterative and planned stays. The objective of this study is to determine whether the timing of psychiatric consultations is associated with 30-day and 7-day readmission rates. RESULTS: A total of 4498 inpatients (2298(51·1%) women, age = 59·8(±19·3) years) were referred to CLP. Adjusting for age, sex, place of residence, year of admission, type of ward, psychiatric diagnosis and disease severity, later consultation was associated with higher 30-day and 7-day readmission rates (adjusted Odds Ratio [95% confidence interval]:1.21[1·10-1·33] and 1·26[1·11-3·13], respectively). Further adjusting for length of stay, the association remained significant for 7-day readmission (1.28[1·05-1·57]). After stratification on the length of stay, for stays in the highest tercile (i.e., >21 days) an intervention after day 3 (versus before) was associated with 30-day and 7-day readmission rates of 15·8% versus 8·6%(1·81 [1·11-3·13]) and 4·9% versus 1·8%(2·98[1·16-9·88]), respectively. CONCLUSION: Earlier psychiatric consultation was associated with fewer 30-day and 7-day readmissions. Interventional studies are needed to show that proactive CLP teams could help general hospitals to improve quality of care and make significant economic savings.