Zusammenfassung
Based on data of the psychiatric basic documentation of 4066 patients, predictors of type of referral as well as outpatient aftercare were analyzed by means of logistic regression analyses. Of the patients, 25.7% were admitted without any referral, 18.4% were referred by a general practitioner, and 9.8% by a psychiatrist in private practice. Patients referred by a general practitioner suffered ...
Zusammenfassung
Based on data of the psychiatric basic documentation of 4066 patients, predictors of type of referral as well as outpatient aftercare were analyzed by means of logistic regression analyses. Of the patients, 25.7% were admitted without any referral, 18.4% were referred by a general practitioner, and 9.8% by a psychiatrist in private practice. Patients referred by a general practitioner suffered more frequently from an affective disorder or schizophrenia and were residents of senior citizen homes. Inpatients sent by a psychiatrist were more often residents of sheltered homes, showed a present episode lasting more than 3 months, and had undergone psychopharmacological pretreatment with an atypical antipsychotic or SSRI. Outpatient aftercare was recommended to 83.1% of inpatients: 49.4% by a general practitioner and 32.1% by a psychiatrist in private practice. Outpatient aftercare by a general practitioner was more frequent in the elderly and patients with addiction disorders. Referral by a psychiatrist in private practice as well as schizophrenia or an affective disorder led more often to outpatient aftercare by a psychiatrist. The small number of patients referred by general practitioners and psychiatrists in private practice has to become the focus of quality management.