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Post-discharge hospital utilization among adult medical inpatients with depressive symptoms

✍ Scribed by Suzanne E. Mitchell; Michael K. Paasche-Orlow; Shaula R. Forsythe; Veerappa K. Chetty; Julie K. O'Donnell; Jeffrey L. Greenwald; Larry Culpepper; Brian W. Jack


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2010
Tongue
English
Weight
166 KB
Volume
5
Category
Article
ISSN
1553-5592

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

BACKGROUND:

Little evidence exists to determine whether depression predicts hospital utilization following discharge among adult inpatients on a general medical service.

OBJECTIVE:

We aimed to determine whether a positive depression screen during hospitalization is significantly associated with an increased rate of returning for hospital services.

DESIGN:

A secondary analysis was performed using data from 738 English‐speaking, hospitalized adults from the Project RED randomized controlled trial (clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT00252057) conducted at an urban academic safety‐net hospital.

MEASUREMENTS:

We used the nine‐item Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ‐9) depression screening tool to identify patients with depressive symptoms. The primary endpoint was hospital utilization, defined as the number of emergency department (ED) visits plus readmissions within 30 days of discharge. Poisson regression was used to control for confounding variables.

RESULTS:

Of the 738 subjects included in the analysis, 238 (32%) screened positive for depressive symptoms. The unadjusted hospital utilization within 30 days of discharge was 56 utilizations per 100 depressed patients compared with 30 utilizations per 100 non‐depressed patients, incident rate ratio (IRR) (confidence interval [CI]), 1.90 (1.51–2.40). After controlling for potential confounders, a higher rate of post‐discharge hospital utilization was observed in patients with depressive symptoms compared to patients without depressive symptoms (IRR [CI], 1.73 [1.27–2.36]).

CONCLUSIONS:

A positive screen for depressive symptoms during an inpatient hospital stay is associated with an increased rate of readmission within 30 days of discharge in an urban, academic, safety‐net hospital population. Journal of Hospital Medicine 2010. © 2010 Society of Hospital Medicine.


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## Abstract ## Objective We addressed the relatively unexplored use of screening scores measuring __symptoms__ of depression and/or anxiety to aid in identifying patients at increased risk for post‐discharge DSM‐IV Axis I __diagnoses.__ We were unable to find such studies in the literature. ## Me