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Department of Liaison Psychiatry, Guy's, King's & St Thomas' Medical & Dental School, St Thomas' Hospital, London SE1 7EH
Department of Accident & Emergency Medicine, Guy's & St Thomas' Hospitals Trust
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Abstract |
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To study the presentation, assessment and management of all patients attending St Thomas' accident and emergency (A&E) department with overt mental health problems. The method included a pragmatic definition of overt mental health problems and a range of strategies to maximise case ascertainment.
RESULTS
The department saw 565 presentations in a 3-month period. Patients were predominantly young, male, single, unemployed, housed outside the area served by the local primary care group and presented outside normal working hours.
CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS
This study confirms that A&E departments may be the most frequently used setting for urgent mental health assessments in central London. The patients attending differ from those using community mental health teams. It is argued that mental health liaison services based in inner-city A&E departments should be developed.
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Introduction |
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Method |
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Results |
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Seventy per cent of these presentations were outside the office hours of 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday to Friday. Four per cent of patients left unassessed and 82% were assessed by a mental health professional in A&E. Thirty per cent of presentations resulted in hospital admission 20% to psychiatric units and 10% to general wards (typically with self-harm or delirium tremens). Further care for the other patients included general practitioner (GP) follow-up (15%), no follow-up (12%) and referral to CMHTs (14%), drug and alcohol services (9%) and social workers (0.5%).
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Comment |
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The department studied here had the benefit of two mental health nurses based in A&E and continuous junior and senior psychiatric cover. This probably explains the relatively high percentage of specialist mental health assessments undertaken in the St Thomas' A&E department compared with those reported in other A&E departments for all psychiatric presentations (52%) (Dunn & Fernando, 1989) and DSH in particular (54%) (Kapur et al, 1998).
Psychiatric presentations to A&E departments serving deprived urban areas are unlikely to diminish in number and dedicated mental health services are urgently required to meet these needs. The strict sectorisation of community mental health services poses a funding problem for mental health work in A&E departments. Funding arrangements for patients coming to A&E who live outside the local area need to be resolved. The advent of primary-care-led mental health service commissioning threatens to sideline the role of the general hospital in mental health provision for non-local patients even further.
The National Service Framework for Mental Health (Department of Health, 1999) does acknowledge that A&E departments can make a valuable contribution to 24-hour access to services, particularly for patients who have deliberately self-harmed, rough sleepers and those not registered with a GP. However, the underlying assumption guiding national policy seems to be that A&E departments are not the right environment for mental health assessments out of hours. Telephone helplines, extended hours for CMHTs and domiciliary visits by GPs are often mentioned as alternatives. We would argue that spending on these developments is unlikely to divert patients with mental health problems from A&E departments. Investment in dedicated A&E mental health liaison services could transform the quality of patients' and professionals' experiences of A&E psychiatry and lead to the view that this is a preferred point of access to mental health services, especially out of hours.
Since these data were collected, the local health authority, mental health trust and acute hospital trust have collaborated to expand the A&E mental health liaison team at St Thomas' Hospital as the A&E department merged with that formerly at Guy's. The team now includes a dedicated consultant psychiatrist, a staff grade psychiatrist and eight psychiatric liaison nurses (including a team leader) in addition to rotas of consultants and trainee psychiatrists both in and out of hours. The nurses aim to provide cover 24-hours a day. We hope to publish descriptions of the practice of this enlarged A&E mental health liaison team as it may prove to be a model for other large, inner-city A&E departments.
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Acknowledgments |
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References |
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DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH (1999) National Service Framework for Mental Health: Modern Standards and Service Models. London: Department of Health.
DUNN, J. & FERNANDO, R. (1989) Psychiatric
presentations to an accident and emergency department. Psychiatric
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672-674.
HAWTON, K. & FAGG, J. (1992) Trends in deliberate self poisoning and self injury in Oxford, 1976-90. BMJ, 304, 1409-1411.
JOHNSON, S. & THORNICROFT, G. (1995) Emergency
psychiatric services in England and Wales. BMJ,
311,
287-288.
JOHNSON, S., RAMSAY, R., THORNICROFT, G., et al (1997) (eds) London's Mental Health. The Report to the King's Fund London Commission, 1997. London: King's Fund.
KAPUR, N., HOUSE, A., CREED, F., et al (1998)
Management of deliberate self poisoning in adults in four teaching hospitals:
a descriptive study. BMJ,
316,
831-832.
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