Emergency Psychiatry
DEFINITION
- Emergency departments (EDs) are increasingly utilized by patients in need of psychiatric assessment and care. This trend is due in part to[1]:
- Shortages of psychiatrists and other mental health professionals
- Limited and often fragmented systems of outpatient psychiatric care
- Lack of other sources of support for persons with chronic mental illnesses
- Steadily diminishing inpatient psychiatric beds, both acute and long-term
- Increase in patients seeking help for their own mental healthcare[2]
- This combination of increased utilization of ED services with decreased safe disposition options has resulted in skyrocketing rates of ED "boarding" of psychiatrically ill patients[3]
- The most important consideration in emergency psychiatry is the safety of all parties[4]:
- A systematic approach to a risk assessment, stabilization, and safe disposition is the most effective means to create a safe and effective treatment environment for acute psychiatric conditions.
- The American Psychiatric Association’s Task Force on Psychiatric Emergency Services assembled in 2002 and defined a psychiatric emergency as[5]:
- An acute disturbance of thought, mood, behavior or relationships that requires an immediate intervention as defined by the patient, family or the community
- Might also be defined as a set of circumstances in which:
- The behavior or condition of an individual is perceived by someone, often not the identified individual, as having the potential to rapidly eventuate in a catastrophic outcome AND
- The resources available to understand and deal with the situation are not available at the time and place of the occurrence.
- Central to the concept of an emergency include the following, all of which contribute to the need for immediate access to a higher level of care:
- A lack of prior assessment or adequate planning, with resultant uncertainty
- Unscheduled, severe, or urgent symptoms
- Failure of natural or professional supports
- It is also important to be aware of mental health crises, in which someone may not yet require an acute level of care, but may quickly deteriorate and need an emergency evaluation.[6]
- A person’s thoughts, emotions, and behaviors may put them at increased risk of harming themselves or others.
- A crisis may put one at risk of not being able to care for themselves or access food, clothing, and shelter.
- Can occur anywhere, at any time
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Last updated: July 4, 2022
Citation
Mangano, Emma, and Matthew E Peters. "Emergency Psychiatry." Johns Hopkins Psychiatry Guide, 2022. Johns Hopkins Guides, www.hopkinsguides.com/hopkins/view/Johns_Hopkins_Psychiatry_Guide/787011/all/Emergency_Psychiatry.
Mangano E, Peters ME. Emergency Psychiatry. Johns Hopkins Psychiatry Guide. 2022. https://www.hopkinsguides.com/hopkins/view/Johns_Hopkins_Psychiatry_Guide/787011/all/Emergency_Psychiatry. Accessed December 8, 2023.
Mangano, E., & Peters, M. E. (2022). Emergency Psychiatry. In Johns Hopkins Psychiatry Guide https://www.hopkinsguides.com/hopkins/view/Johns_Hopkins_Psychiatry_Guide/787011/all/Emergency_Psychiatry
Mangano E, Peters ME. Emergency Psychiatry [Internet]. In: Johns Hopkins Psychiatry Guide. ; 2022. [cited 2023 December 08]. Available from: https://www.hopkinsguides.com/hopkins/view/Johns_Hopkins_Psychiatry_Guide/787011/all/Emergency_Psychiatry.
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