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PW01-104 - Factors Associated to Use of Ambulatory Public Mental Health Services A Patients With Schizophrenia in Spain. Case Register Study: Resma

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 April 2020

B. Moreno-Küstner
Affiliation:
Fundación IMABIS, Unidad de Investigación, Distrito Sanitario Málaga, Spain Departamento de Personalidad, Evaluación y Tratamiento Psicológico, Facultad de Psicología, Universidad de Málaga, Spain
D. Navas-Campaña
Affiliation:
Fundación IMABIS, Unidad de Investigación, Distrito Sanitario Málaga, Spain
F. Mayoral
Affiliation:
Servicio de Psiquiatria, Hospital Universitario Carlos Haya, Málaga, Spain
P. Angona
Affiliation:
Unidad de Salud Mental Comunitaria ‘Guadalmedina’, Málaga, Spain
J.M. García-Herrera
Affiliation:
Unidad de Salud Mental Comunitaria ‘Centro’, Málaga, Spain
P. Moreno-Peral
Affiliation:
Fundación IMABIS, Unidad de Investigación, Distrito Sanitario Málaga, Malaga, Spain
O. Pérez
Affiliation:
Fundación Imabis, Málaga, Spain

Abstract

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Objective

To identify factors associated with visits by patients with schizophrenia and related disorders to community mental health services, under the Mental Health Department of Carlos Haya Hospital in Malaga, Spain.

Methods

We undertook a cross-sectional study. Data on demographic and clinical factors and service use were obtained from the public mental health services database and centralized in the “Malaga Schizophrenia Case Register (RESMA)”. The outcome measure, defined as the total number of outpatient consultations during one year, was analyzed by multilevel multivariate linear regression.

Results

The analysis included 1097 patients with diagnoses of schizophrenia and related disorders (F20-F29, ICD-10).The adjusted model explained 46.35% of the variance. Patients who contacted both types of professional (nurses and psychiatrists) had a higher number of visits compared to patients who only contacted a psychiatrist (p< 0.001), and the individual psychiatrist attending the patients was also associated with the number of visits (p< 0.001).Clinical variables, such as a higher global level of severity (p< 0.001), a diagnosis of a persistent delusion disorder and having an inpatient episode (p< 0.001), were also associated with a higher number of visits. Patients who were receiving welfare benefits or who had no formal education or were illiterate had a higher number of visits. Patients living alone, living outside the study area and living in more rural municipalities was associated with fewer ambulatory contacts.

Conclusion

Among all variables, the role of psychiatrists and nurses in organized outpatient settings present the strongest association with the number of visits by similar patients.

Type
Epidemiology
Copyright
Copyright © European Psychiatric Association 2009
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