Ailsa Hospital
Ayrshire Central Hospital, Kilwinning Road, Irvine KA12 8SS
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To examine the prevalence and admission patterns of patients with personality disorder admitted to a Scottish general adult psychiatry service. We carried out a retrospective case-note study of patients identified from the computerised patient administration system. A subgroup of patients was identified as having a longer in-patient stay. Their admission pattern over the preceding 4 years was studied further.
RESULTS
Sixty-two of 844 patients admitted had personality disorder. Thirty-nine had a primary diagnosis of personality disorder, 19 had an additional diagnosis of psychiatric disorder and 12 of alcohol or substance misuse. Within the subgroup admitted for longer in 2001, patterns of few/brief and numerous/often lengthy admissions were noted in earlier years.
CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS
Personality disorder occurs in approximately 7% of admissions to general adult psychiatry beds. Many have additional diagnoses of psychiatric disorder, or substance or alcohol misuse further complicating their treatment.
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A retrospective survey of case-notes was carried out for all patients from the southern half of Ayrshire with personality disorder (ICD code F60) admitted to the hospital in 2001. Patients were identified using the computerised patient administration system (COMPAS), which can provide diagnostic information (ICD-10 (World Health Organization, 1992) admission and discharge clinical diagnoses) in addition to information on duration and location of in-patient stay. A subgroup of patients with longer duration of admission (5 weeks or more in total) in 2001 was identified. Records of this subgroups in-patient care in the preceding 4 years were then examined to observe the pattern of admission over a longer period of time.
Data were collected on each patients diagnosis (personality disorder and other psychiatric illness), associated alcohol and substance misuse for admissions in 2001, and on the number and length of in-patient admissions over the 5-year period for those in the subgroup.
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Diagnostic categories
Thirty-nine (63%) had a primary diagnosis of personality disorder. Nineteen
(30%) had an additional diagnosis of psychiatric disorder (depressive episode;
acute stress reaction; schizophrenia; mild mental retardation). Twelve (19.3%)
had a diagnosis of alcohol or substance misuse, and 3 (4.8%) had both a
psychiatric disorder and a disorder due to alcohol or substance misuse in
addition to personality disorder.
Personality disorder subtypes were diagnosed as follows: Emotionally unstable 32 (51.6%); Unspecified 16 (25.8%); Dissocial 8 (12.9%); Anxious [avoidant] 3 (4.8%); Dependent, Histrionic and Other specific personality disorder 1 (1.6%) each.
Pattern of admission
In 2001, 62 patients spent 497 weeks in in-patient care. A subgroup of 25
patients was identified with a total stay in excess of 5 weeks in this year.
To further examine the longer-term pattern of in-patient treatment, this
subgroup was considered on the assumption that their problems were more
severe. Sixteen (24%) had a diagnosis of emotionally unstable personality
disorder. In 2001, this subgroup had an average in-patient stay of 13.24
weeks, in contrast to the average stay of 8.02 weeks for the whole group.
When the earlier years admission patterns were examined, the subgroup of 25 patients had been admitted for a total of 647 weeks between 1997-2000 (average 6.47 weeks per patient per year). Within the subgroup of 25 patients who were admitted for 5 weeks or longer in 2001, two patterns of admission in earlier years were noted. Some patients were admitted for the first time in 2001. The first admission pattern consisted of patients who had comparatively few, brief admissions in the earlier years, e.g. Patient 10 (Fig. 1).
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Fig. 1. Patient 10.
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The second pattern of admission consisted of patients who had numerous admissions and a total of many weeks per year as an in-patient, e.g. Patient 21 (Fig. 2).
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Fig. 2. Patient 21.
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The admission rate for personality disorder in Ailsa Hospital is slightly higher than that quoted for Scotland as a whole for the year 2000-2001 (ISD Scotland, 2001). The Scottish data includes admissions for alcohol and substance abuse and pre-senile dementia in the denominator, some of which would be dealt with by sub-specialist services in Ayrshire. The Scottish data also reflects the fact that community-based psychiatric services are not fully developed in all health board areas. The community mental health services in Ayrshire are comparatively well developed. The preponderance of females admitted in our study was more marked in the Scottish data as a whole, male:female=367:675 for admissions aged <65 years.
It could be argued that the rates for our study and for Scotland as a whole are not as high as have been found elsewhere. Studies of personality disorder tend to use research-oriented diagnostic criteria, which have been found to increase the likelihood of clinicians making a diagnosis of personality disorder when compared with the usual clinical interview (Zimmerman & Mattia, 1999). While many studies of the prevalence of personality disorders in psychiatric in-patients using standardised assessment instruments produce results in the region of 50% or more, studies of administrative data show a prevalence ranging between 5-12% (Department of Health, 1995; Olfsun & Mechanic, 1996). The rates for our study and for Scotland as a whole are derived from clinical discharge diagnoses.
Most of the patients with personality disorder in our study were in the younger age group. This may fit with the belief that patients mature and their personality traits become less troublesome with time. Recent work in this area by Zanarini et al (2003) showed a high rate of remission, but admitted that the patients in their study were highly disturbed and highly treated, and that they could not determine if the remission was a result of treatment or something else. The predominance of the emotionally unstable personality disorder in our in-patient group is in keeping with findings of earlier work (de Girolamo & Dotto, 2000).
Limitations of our study include the small numbers of patients and the retrospective method, dependent on accurate case-note recording and accurate clinical diagnoses. We did not attempt to validate the diagnoses. We did not carry out a statistical analysis of clustering of admission patterns in earlier years for the subgroup with longer stays in 2001. We cannot exclude the possibility that Ayrshire patients with personality disorder were admitted to psychiatric hospitals elsewhere. However, bed pressures in the West of Scotland as a whole tend to result in Ayrshires import rather than export of admissions. Our study did not examine treatment or its outcome. The coexistence of personality disorder with Axis I disorders has implications for how those psychiatric disorders can be managed. Much has been written about treatment of personality disorder in specialist units, but it remains to be seen if these levels of treatment can be applied in secondary care settings with similar effect.
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