OBJECTIVE:The author's goal is to determine whether there has been a
recent change in the number and proportion of severely ill psychiatric
patients treated in general hospitals. METHOD: He analyzed the discharge
data from the National Hospital Discharge Survey for the years between 1970
and 1987, focusing particularly on the discharges of patients with
psychiatric versus nonpsychiatric diagnoses. The number and proportion of
discharges of patients with psychiatric diagnoses in four major diagnostic
groups (depression, bipolar spectrum disorders, schizophrenia, and other
psychoses) were determined. RESULTS: Between 1970 and 1987, discharges of
patients with psychiatric diagnoses from general hospitals increased by a
factor of 0.8. The percentage of discharges of patients with the diagnoses
of depression (18.0%-22.7%), schizophrenia (9.4%-13.6%), and paranoid or
other nonorganic psychoses (3.1%-4.0%) remained relatively constant. The
percentage of discharges of patients with the diagnosis of nondepressed
bipolar disorder increased from 0.6% in 1970 to 3.2% in 1987. CONCLUSIONS:
Although there has been a recent absolute increase in the number of general
hospital patients with severe psychiatric diagnoses, the increase has been
tempered by a concomitant increase in the number of patients with nonsevere
diagnoses. Changes in classification systems (DSM-II or ICDA- 8 to DSM-III
or ICD-9-CM) and questions regarding the rigor with which the nosologic
changes have been incorporated into practice complicate the interpretation
of these findings.Abstract Teaser