Foreseeably Early Deaths in Patients With Psychiatric Disorders

Author:

Yager Joel1ORCID,Treem Jonathan2,Strouse Thomas B.3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychiatry, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora, Colorado

2. Palliative Care and Hospice at Mid-Atlantic Permanente Medical Group, Kaiser Permanente, Gaithersburg, Maryland

3. Department of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences, UCLA David Geffen School of Medicine, Los Angeles, California.

Abstract

Abstract Patients with psychiatric disorders often have foreshortened lives, attributed both to “natural” medical and “unnatural” external causes of death such as suicide, homicide, and accident. Many deaths are foreseeable due to circumstances linked to patients' psychiatric disorders. These can include illness-associated disparities, adverse treatment effects, lack of self-care, and behaviors stemming directly from psychopathological processes. Whereas some of these processes contribute indirectly to patients' causes of death, others are more directly consequential, causing patients to “die from” their psychiatric disorders. Some patients manifest likely fatal trajectories that may lead to “end-stage” psychiatric disorders. Palliative approaches may optimize their quality of life and potentially alter these trajectories, but patients with psychiatric disorders are less likely to receive optimal end-of-life care. Although assuring a “good death” can be challenging, systematic efforts can assist in providing patients with psychiatric disorders deaths with dignity rather than indignity.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

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