Author:
BALESTRIERI M.,BISOFFI G.,DE FRANCESCO M.,ERIDANI B.,MARTUCCI M.,TANSELLA M.
Abstract
Background. We have recently reported a two-phase study on psychiatric morbidity in a sample of
general hospital patients. This paper reports the results of the 6-month and 12-month follow-up of
these patients.Methods. The screening questionnaire was the GHQ-12. The main diagnostic instrument used in
the second phase was the CIDI-PHC. All patients who had been interviewed with CIDI-PHC
(N = 363) were followed-up and the baseline assessment was compared with the scoring on
questionnaires administered in the 6-month postal enquiry and with the psychopathological status
at 12-month, elicited with a telephone structured interview.Results. Sixty-two and 87% of patients completed the 6- and 12-month follow-up assessment
respectively. The first follow-up indicated no significant decrease in the level of symptoms. The 12-month follow-up interview showed that 23% of males and 40% of females had poor/mostly poor
mental health. The logistic model showed that females with a definite ICD-10 diagnosis, admitted
to a medical department, who had consumed psychotropic drugs in the previous year, had the most
unfavourable outcome. The risk of a poor/mostly poor outcome steadily increased with the severity
of the psychopathology during hospitalization.Conclusion. In medical and surgical general hospital patients the risk factors associated with a poor
mental health outcome are similar to those found in primary care patients. Greater attention should
be paid in assessing routinely mental health status of general hospital patients during hospitalization.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Applied Psychology
Cited by
14 articles.
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