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Chronic Somatic and Psychiatric Co-morbidities are Associated with Psychiatric Treatment Success; A Nested Cross-sectional Study

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 March 2020

I. Filipcic
Affiliation:
Psychiatric hospital Sveti Ivan, Department of integrative psychiatry, Zagreb, Croatia
I. Simunovic Filipcic
Affiliation:
University Hospital Zagreb, Department of psychological medicine, Zagreb, Croatia
M. Rojnic Kuzman
Affiliation:
University Hospital Zagreb, Department of psychiatry, Zagreb, Croatia
G. Vladimir
Affiliation:
Psychiatric Hospital, Sveti Ivan“, Department of integrative psychiatry, Zagreb, Croatia
P. Svrdlin
Affiliation:
Psychiatric hospital Sveti Ivan, Department of integrative psychiatry, Zagreb, Croatia
S. Vuk Pisk
Affiliation:
Psychiatric hospital Sveti Ivan, Department of integrative psychiatry, Zagreb, Croatia
Z. Bajic
Affiliation:
Biometrika Healthcare Research, Biometrika Healthcare Research, Zagreb, Croatia

Abstract

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Introduction

A rich body of literature dealt with somatic comorbidities of psychiatric illnesses. However, relatively few explored the association of somatic and psychiatric comorbidities with psychiatric treatment success.

Objective

Objective of this analysis was to explore chronic somatic and psychiatric comorbidities association with the average number of psychiatric re-hospitalisations annually.

Methods

This cross-sectional analysis was done on the baseline data of prospective cohort study “Somatic comorbidities in psychiatric patients” started during 2016 at Psychiatric hospital Sveti Ivan, Zagreb, Croatia. We included 798 patients. Outcome was the average number of psychiatric re-hospitalisations annually since the diagnosis. Predictors were number of chronic somatic and psychiatric comorbidities. Covariates that we controlled were sex, age, BMI, marital status, number of household members, education, work status, duration of primary psychiatric illness, CGI–severity at diagnosis, treatment with antidepressants and antipsychotics.

Results

Interaction of somatic and psychiatric comorbidities was the strongest predictor of the average number of psychiatric re-hospitalisations annually (P < 0.001). Mean number of re-hospitalisations annually adjusted for all covariates, was increasing from 0.60 in patients with no chronic comorbidities, up to 1.10 in patients with ≥ 2 somatic and ≥ 2 psychiatric comorbidities.

Conclusion

Somatic and psychiatric comorbidities are independently associated with the psychiatric treatment success. Further studies should look at possible causal pathways between them, and interdisciplinary treatment of psychiatric patients is urgently needed.

Disclosure of interest

The authors have not supplied their declaration of competing interest.

Type
e-Poster walk: Co-morbidity/dual pathologies and guidelines/Guidance – part 1
Copyright
Copyright © European Psychiatric Association 2017
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