OBJECTIVE: The study examined factors associated with admission to
public and private hospitals from a mental health care emergency screening
system operating under a longstanding mandate to maximize use of private
inpatient treatment. METHODS: For 206 patients evaluated at the mental
health emergency screening site over a two-and-a-half-month period, data
were collected on demographic and clinical characteristics, admission
history, services received during the emergency encounter, system variables
such as time the patient spent at the emergency screening site, number of
admission sites asked to accept the patient, and all reasons cited by
providers for refusing to admit the patient. Logistic regression was used
to develop a model of factors most likely and least likely to be associated
with private hospitalization. RESULTS: Overall, 60 percent of the sample
was refused admission by one or more providers, and 55 percent, who were
not accepted by and private hospital, became public patients. Private
hospital admission was associated with patient or family involvement in
referral and disposition, private or Medicaid insurance, a presenting
problem of depression or suicidality, and longer time spent at the
emergency screening site. Public admission was associated with no
insurance, a past history of major public hospitalization, current or past
history of assaultiveness, a presenting problem of aggression, and lack of
any discharge site. CONCLUSIONS: Private providers are reluctant to admit
patients who have characteristics associated with public hospitalization.
In the restructuring of health care, a more fully privatized system will
likely be called on to absorb such patients. Their care, treatment, and
impact on the system should be carefully monitored and evaluated.
Abstract Teaser