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Risk factors for return visits and rehospitalizations to the child emergency psychiatric unit: A retrospective study over 2 years at Saint-Étienne University Hospital.

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TLDR
Students could undergo early screening of psychiatric pathologies using mobile screening teams which would save money, avoid hospitalizations, and when necessary, facilitate both hospitalization and return visits.
Abstract
Purpose This retrospective study aimed to achieve a better understanding of risk factors leading children and adolescents hospitalized in an emergency psychiatric ward to return visits, and to propose preventive devices. Method From January 2, 2010 through February 29, 2012, 180 children and adolescents younger than 17 years were hospitalized in a total of 261 stays in the emergency psychiatric ward of University hospital of Saint-Etienne (France). We assessed clinical and sociodemographic characteristics of these patients and traced any of their return visits to the same unit through December 31, 2012. Risk factors for patients’ repeated visits were calculated using multivariate analysis, and the cumulative incidence of returns using the Kaplan-Meier method for censored data. We used confidence interval of relative risk, considering 0.05 to reflect significance. Results Over the 2 years of the study, 77 (42.8%) of the 180 patients revisited the emergency psychiatric ward; 62 (80.7%) of these required further hospitalizations. Multivariate analysis linked the patients’ psychiatric history (RR = 2.5) and pursuit of vocational education (RR = 4) with the risk of return. Return visits rose from 27.2% at 6 months to 41.2% at 2 years. Conclusion Knowledge of risk factors would allow implementation of secondary or tertiary preventive devices. Students could undergo early screening of psychiatric pathologies using mobile screening teams which would save money, avoid hospitalizations, and when necessary, facilitate both hospitalization and return visits.

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De l'hospitalisation d'adolescents présentant des problèmes psychiatriques : parcours bibliographique et rapport d'une expérience hellénique : Adolescence et traitements séquentiels

TL;DR: In this paper, a revue, indicative plutot qu'exhaustive, de la bibliographie permet entre autres aux auteurs de se situer par rapport aux tendances actuelles.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Summary Statistics for Pediatric Psychiatric Visits to US Emergency Departments, 1993–1999

TL;DR: The significant increase in emergency department pediatric mental health (EDPMH) visits from 1993-1999 is greatest among patients who are non-white, teenaged, female, and live in the Northeast or Midwest; this variation in EDPMH visits may reflect variability in the shortage of mental health providers.
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Admissions to acute adolescent psychiatric units: a prospective study of clinical severity and outcome

TL;DR: Acute psychiatric in-patient units for adolescents effectively meet important needs for young people with suicidal risks or other severe mental health problems and may act in suicide prevention, stabilizing symptom severity at a lower level within a short stay.
Journal ArticleDOI

Suicidal children and adolescents with first emergency room presentations: predictors of six-month outcome.

TL;DR: Clinicians should be aware of these risk factors when assessing and managing suicidal youths with first ER presentations and aware of the importance of sobriety at ER visit, and general substance use.
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Who comes back? Characteristics and predictors of return to emergency department services for pediatric mental health care.

TL;DR: Among children and adolescents who accessed the ED for mental health concerns, being female, older in age, in receipt of social assistance, and having an initial visit for a mood disorder or psychotic-related illness were associated with return for further care.
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