Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-fscjk Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-26T21:35:13.023Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Patterns of emergency department presentations for a youth mental health cohort: data-linkage cohort study

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 September 2023

Frank Iorfino*
Affiliation:
Brain and Mind Centre, University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Catherine McHugh
Affiliation:
Brain and Mind Centre, University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Matthew Richards
Affiliation:
Brain and Mind Centre, University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Adam Skinner
Affiliation:
Brain and Mind Centre, University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Ante Prodan
Affiliation:
Brain and Mind Centre, University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia; Translational Health Research Institute, Western Sydney University, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia; and School of Computer, Data and Mathematical Sciences, Western Sydney University, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Jo-an Occhipinti
Affiliation:
Brain and Mind Centre, University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia; and Computer Simulation & Advanced Research Technologies, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Yun Ju Christine Song
Affiliation:
Brain and Mind Centre, University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Simon Chiu
Affiliation:
Brain and Mind Centre, University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Simon Judkins
Affiliation:
Austin Hospital, Heidelberg, Victoria, Australia
Elizabeth Scott
Affiliation:
Brain and Mind Centre, University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia; and St Vincent's Private Hospital, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Ian B. Hickie
Affiliation:
Brain and Mind Centre, University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
*
Correspondence: Frank Iorfino. Email: [email protected]
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Background

Primary youth mental health services in Australia have increased access to care for young people, yet the longer-term outcomes and utilisation of other health services among these populations is unclear.

Aims

To describe the emergency department presentation patterns of a help-seeking youth mental health cohort.

Method

Data linkage was performed to extract Emergency Department Data Collection registry data (i.e. emergency department presentations, pattern of re-presentations) for a transdiagnostic cohort of 7024 youths (aged 12–30 years) who presented to mental health services. Outcome measures were pattern of presentations and reason for presentations (i.e. mental illness; suicidal behaviours and self-harm; alcohol and substance use; accident and injury; physical illness; and other).

Results

During the follow-up period, 5372 (76.5%) had at least one emergency department presentation. The presentation rate was lower for males (IRR = 0.87, 95% CI 0.86–0.89) and highest among those aged 18 to 24 (IRR = 1.117, 95% CI 1.086–1.148). Almost one-third (31.12%) had an emergency department presentation that was directly associated with mental illness or substance use, and the most common reasons for presentation were for physical illness and accident or injury. Index visits for mental illness or substance use were associated with a higher rate of re-presentation.

Conclusions

Most young people presenting to primary mental health services also utilised emergency services. The preventable and repeated nature of many presentations suggests that reducing the ongoing secondary risks of mental disorders (i.e. substance misuse, suicidality, physical illness) could substantially improve the mental and physical health outcomes of young people.

Type
Paper
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the Royal College of Psychiatrists

Globally, mental disorders among young people are the leading cause of disability because of their impacts on overall health and productivity.Reference Commission1 Most mental disorders are also associated with substantial premature all-cause mortality due to the increased risk of developing subsequent medical conditions and increased risk of death by suicide.Reference Momen, Plana-Ripoll, Agerbo, Benros, Børglum and Christensen2,Reference Weye, Momen, Christensen, Iburg, Dalsgaard and Laursen3 With over 75% of adult mental disorders emerging before the age of 25 years, these disorders often have lifelong impacts even if the disorder is subthreshold or has remitted, so effective mental healthcare during this period is critical to reduce the burden for individuals, society and the health system.Reference Gibb, Fergusson and Horwood48

The development and expansion of primary youth mental healthcare services in Australia has increased access to mental health services for young people.Reference Patulny, Muir, Powell, Flaxman and Oprea9 Previous work has demonstrated that young people accessing these services often present with attenuated mood, anxiety and psychotic syndromes,Reference Scott, Hermens, Naismith, White, Whitwell and Guastella10 yet 14% reported a previous suicide attempt, which carries risks for worsening illness trajectories (e.g. onset of bipolar disorder, alcohol or substance misuse).Reference Iorfino, Hermens, Cross, Zmicerevska, Nichles and Groot11 Furthermore, two-thirds of young people accessing primary mental healthcare have poor social and occupational functional outcomes, which tend to be associated with significant physical health comorbidities and other indicators of disorder complexity.Reference Iorfino, Carpenter, Cross, Crouse, Davenport and Hermens12 Concurrently we have seen that emergency department presentations for self-harm and suicidal behaviour in Australia are increasing,Reference Hiscock, Neely, Lei and Freed13,Reference Perera, Wand, Bein, Chalkley, Ivers and Steinbeck14 as are presentations for mental health diagnoses,Reference Tran, Lambeth, Sanderson, de Graaff, Breslin and Tran15 with the greatest increase observed among young people. This may reflect increased help-seeking by young people, families and schools, but may also indicate that community mental health services are currently unable to meet the substantial demand and needs of young people.Reference Sawyer and Patton16 Although much research has been devoted to the increase in mental illness-related emergency presentations,Reference Tran, Lambeth, Sanderson, de Graaff, Breslin and Tran15 few studies have investigated the patterns of emergency visits for young people in the mental health system. Indeed, young people with a mental disorder are more likely to utilise emergency services than those without,Reference Mitchell, McMaugh, Lystad, Cameron and Nielssen17 suggesting the need to understand the types of emergency department presentations common to young people in the mental health system.

Understanding the relationships between young people's use of primary mental healthcare and emergency services is crucial in developing a more complete understanding of their health service needs. Thus, the aims of this study were to describe the emergency department presentation patterns of a youth mental health cohort with emerging mood and psychotic syndromes, using a large, linked data-set of emergency department presentations in New South Wales (NSW), Australia.

Method

Study population

The study used data from the Brain and Mind Research Register (BPRR), a longitudinal cohort study of 7024 young people presenting to the youth mental health clinics of the Brain and Mind Centre in Sydney, Australia, between October 2008 and October 2020. Most young people initially presented to primary mental health services (i.e. ‘headspace’, which offers integrated mental health services for young people in AustraliaReference McGorry, Tanti, Stokes, Hickie, Carnell and Littlefield18,Reference McGorry, Mei, Chanen, Hodges, Alvarez-Jimenez and Killackey19 ), with some also going on to attend more specialised services.Reference Scott, Hermens, Naismith, White, Whitwell and Guastella10,Reference Carpenter, Iorfino, Cross, Nichles, Zmicerevska and Crouse20 The service primarily attracts young people with a range of mental health problems, including those with subthreshold and full-threshold mental disorders. Young people may self-refer, or have been referred by family members, friends, school counselling services or via a general practitioner. All young people attending these clinics received clinician-based case management and psychological, social and/or medical interventions as part of standard care.

Inclusion criteria for this study were: (a) attendance of at least one visit at the Brain and Mind Centre's youth mental health services and (b) age between 12 and 30 years at first recorded presentation. Exclusion criteria for this study were: (a) medical instability or lack of capacity to give informed consent (as determined by a psychiatrist), (b) history of neurological disease (e.g. tumour, head trauma, epilepsy), (c) medical illness known to affect cognitive and brain function (e.g. cancer, electroconvulsive therapy in the past 3 months), (d) clinically evident intellectual disability and/or (e) insufficient English to participate in the research protocol.

Patient and public involvement

Patients and carers were not directly involved in the initial study design. However, the clinical research team conducting this study is embedded within a clinical service and clinical research team with major lived experience involvement in all research activities, including the specific design of this study through regular consultation.

Data and record linkage

The BPRR was linked to three external databases held by the Centre for Health Record Linkage in NSW, Australia. Complete details of the data linkage approach can be found in our previous work.Reference McHugh, Song, Zmicerevska, Crouse, Nichles and Wilson21,Reference McHugh, Iorfino, Zmicerevska, Song, Skinner and Scott22 Clinical research data for this cohort were linked to routinely collected data from the Emergency Department Data Collection (EDDC) registry over a 10-year period, from January 2010 to October 2020.Reference McHugh, Song, Zmicerevska, Crouse, Nichles and Wilson21 A waiver of consent was granted according to the National Statement on Ethical Conduct in Human Research (2007). A master linkage key was generated for each participant to mask identifying information, including name, address, date of birth and gender. This key was then used by the NSW Centre for Health Record Linkage (CHeReL), which performed probabilistic matching by applying an automated blocking algorithm to identify records belonging to the same participant. The probabilistic matching was necessary to ensure accurate linkage of the data-sets while protecting the privacy of the participants. The false-positive record identification rate was controlled at 0.5%. Linkage was then performed using R statistical software (version 4.1.0) using the master linkage key to join across the EDDC registry, NSW Registry of Births, Deaths and Marriages (RBDM) and clinical research databases.

This study reports on data from the EDDC registry, which contains routinely collected data for presentations to all public hospital emergency departments in NSW (around 184 emergency departments in 2016−2017). Data analysed included arrival mode, type of visit, triage category, mode of separation (i.e. the manner in which the patient left the emergency department) and emergency department diagnosis (i.e. reason for presentation). SNOMED, ICD-9 and ICD-10 codes were used by two clinically trained authors to classify presentations into predetermined categories: (a) mental illness, (b) suicidal behaviours and self-harm, (c) alcohol and substance misuse, (d) accident and injury, (e) physical illness and (f) other. Interrater reliability was 98%, with all discrepancies between the coders resolved via consensus. A full list of emergency department codes, descriptions and associated presentation categories is given in the Supplementary materials available at https://dx.doi.org/10.1192/bjo.2023.521. The outcomes of interest for this study were the proportion of the cohort presenting to an emergency department, rate of emergency department presentation and re-presentation, total number of presentations per person, time between re-presentations and reason for presentations.

Ethics statement

The clinical cohort study was approved by the University of Sydney's Human Research Committee (2008/5453 and 2012/1626) and the data linkage study was approved by NSW Population and Health Services Research Ethics Committee (2019/ETH12201).

Statistical analyses

All statistical analyses and calculations were performed using R statistical software for Windows (version 4.1.0). Person-years of follow-up were calculated as the time (in years) between 1 January 2010 and 30 September 2020 that participants were aged 12 years or older (or the relevant age range for age-specific rates). Emergency department presentations that occurred when participants were younger than 12 years were excluded. Those who had a date of death recorded during the study (n = 58) were censored at that date and the corresponding emergency department presentation associated with death (n = 33) was also excluded. The absolute number of emergency department presentations and time between consecutive presentations were calculated for each participant. Group differences for categorical variables were compared using chi-squared tests of independence, crude incidence of emergency department presentations per 1000 person-years and unadjusted incidence rate ratios (IRR) using the ‘rateratio.test’ package,Reference Fay23 which conducts an unbiased test of Poisson incidence ratios given person-years of follow-up. Nominal values for emergency department presentations in NSW by gender, age and reason during 2018–2019 were also reported where appropriate and compared by percentage and incidence rate per 1000 person-years (which is equivalent to the yearly rate per 1000 population).

Results

Of the 7024 individuals from this cohort, three-quarters (5372/7024; 76.5%) had at least one emergency department presentation during the follow-up period (i.e. January 2010 to October 2020) (Fig. 1). A higher proportion of the total cohort had multiple presentations (4360/7024; 62.1%) compared with a single presentation (1012/7024; 14.4%). There were 39 155 emergency department presentations across the cohort, with a median of 3 visits per person (IQR = 1–6) (Fig. 2). Despite there being a slightly greater proportion of females (3952/7024; 56.3%) than males, gender did not account for a statistical difference in the likelihood of individuals presenting to an emergency department at least once during the study follow-up (χ2(1) = 0.039, P = 0.843). Yet, among those who did present, the presentation rate was lower for males (IRR = 0.87, 95% CI 0.86–0.89) than for females and was higher for those aged between 18 and 24 years (IRR = 1.12, 95% CI 1.09–1.15) than for other age groups. Rates of presentation were up to three times higher than the NSW state-wide reported incidence for emergency department presentations (Table 1).

Fig. 1 Emergency department (ED) presentation status among a youth mental health cohort (n = 7024).

Fig. 2 Distribution of total number of emergency department (ED) presentations over the course of follow-up for each individual by gender.

Table 1 Crude incidence for all presentations to an emergency department in the full cohort (n = 7024)

IRR, incidence rate ratio; NSW, New South Wales; ref, reference.

a. NSW rate sourced from the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare 2018–19 report on Mental Health Services in Emergency Departments.24

b. Counts in each category are cumulative and may include individuals contributing to multiple age groups over the 10-year follow-up period.

Of the total cohort, 2186/7024 (31.12%) young people had an emergency department presentation that was directly associated with mental illness or substance use (i.e. mental illness, suicidal behaviours and self-harm, alcohol and substance misuse). The highest rates of mental illness presentations were among those aged 18–24 years (IRR = 1.10, 95% CI 1.013–1.197) and 25–34 years (IRR = 1.09, 95% CI 1.001–1.187) when compared with ages 12–17 years. These rates were between three and five times higher than the NSW state-wide reported incidence for mental illness emergency department presentations (Table 2).

Table 2 Crude incidence for mental illness emergency department presentations in the full cohort (n = 7024)

IRR, incidence rate ratio; NSW, New South Wales; ref, reference.

a. NSW rate sourced from the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare 2018–19 report on Mental Health Services in Emergency Departments.24

b. Counts in each category are cumulative and may include individuals contributing to multiple age groups over the 10-year follow-up period.

The most common reason for presentation was for physical illness, accounting for over half of all emergency department presentations (19 103/37 001; 51.6%), followed by accident and injury (7094/37 001; 19.2%), mental illness (5126/37 001; 13.9%), suicidal behaviours and self-harm (2370/37 001; 6.4%), alcohol and substance misuse (1959/37 001; 5.3%) and other (1349/37 001; 3.6%). Mental illness or substance use (i.e. mental illness, suicidal behaviours and self-harm, alcohol and substance misuse) presentations were more likely to be triaged as emergency or urgent presentations compared with physical illness, accident and injury and other presentations (χ2(1) = 1565.3, P < 0.001).

There were 4360/7024 (62.1%) young people who had multiple emergency department presentations, accounting for 33 783/37 001 (91.3%) of the total number of presentations. Almost one-third of these occurred within 28 days of a previous presentation (10 825/33 783; 32.0%), 6233/33 783 (18.5%) occurred between 28 days and 3 months of a previous presentation, 9140/33 783 (27.1%) occurred between 3 and 12 months of a previous presentation and 7585/33 783 (22.5%) occurred more than 1 year after a previous presentation. Index visits (i.e. first visits to an emergency department) that were for mental illness or substance use (i.e. mental illness, suicidal behaviours and self-harm, alcohol and substance misuse) were associated with a higher rate of re-presentation, compared with physical illness, accident and injury and other presentations (IRR = 1.20, 95% CI 1.17–1.23).

Of the total number of repeat emergency department presentations, 74.0% (25 011/33 783) were defined as re-presentations (i.e. person re-presenting for the same reason during the study period). A quarter of re-presentations occurred within 28 days of a previous presentation (6448/25 011; 25.8%), 3865/25 011 (15.5%) occurred between 28 days and 3 months of a previous presentation, 6655/25 011 (26.6%) occurred between 3 and 12 months of a previous presentation and 8043/25 011 (32.2%) occurred more than 1 year after a previous presentation (Fig. 3).

Fig. 3 The time course for re-presentations and reason for re-presentation.

In total, 9.9% (696/7024) of the cohort were identified as ‘high utilisers’ (i.e. more than four presentations within a 12-month period), and 13.1% (696/5372) of those who presented to an emergency department were high utilisers (Fig. 4). High utilisers were more likely to be female (429/696; 61.6%) (χ2(1) = 8.180, P < 0.01) with a median of 20 presentations (IQR = 14–31) over the entire follow-up period, whereas males (267/696, 38.4%) had a median of 18 presentations (IQR = 15, 95% CI 12–27).

Fig. 4 Distributions of emergency department (ED) presentations for high utilisers (more than four presentations within a 12-month period) versus other utilisers.

Discussion

This study shows that three out of four young people aged between 12 and 30 years who engaged with youth mental health services also utilised emergency services for mental or physical health problems. Multiple presentations were more common than one-off presentations, which may suggest that persistent or recurring health problems were not being sufficiently addressed by primary youth mental healthcare services. Almost one-third of the cohort presented to an emergency department for mental illness or substance use (i.e. mental illness, self-harm and suicide, alcohol and substance related), although mental illness or substance use only accounted for a quarter of all emergency department presentations. The most common reasons for presentation were physical illness and accident or injury (accounting for ~70%), which may reflect the broader risks associated with mental illness among young people engaging with primary care services.

Implications

This study has important implications for primary youth mental healthcare as it highlights the broad and heightened risks among these young people. The high rate and repeated use of emergency services suggest that current primary care-based services are not fully meeting the needs of young people. This supports calls for enhancing the primary care model with better integration of multidisciplinary and secondary care so that young people get the right type of care when they first present.Reference Hickie, Scott, Cross, Iorfino, Davenport and Guastella25 A large proportion of young people are at risk for persistent and recurring mental health problems and secondary impacts that require intensive and ongoing care.Reference Iorfino, Scott, Carpenter, Cross, Hermens and Killedar26 This includes a substantial proportion of the total cohort (9.9%) who were identified as high utilisers of emergency services, with a median of 19 visits during the follow-up period. Yet, the current system does not appear to have the capacity or capability to provide the type of personalised treatment that allocates care based on prior increased risk for progression and extension of illness.Reference Sawrikar, Stewart, LaMonica, Iorfino, Davenport and Cross27 Identifying these young people and facilitating their entry into the right level of care is critical and the role of digital technologies to facilitate this should be examined.Reference Iorfino, Cheng, Cross, Yee, Davenport and Scott28

The re-presentation rate for this cohort was high, with 25.8% occurring within 28 days of a previous emergency department presentation and a further 15.5% occurring within 3 months. This finding supports prior research that established a positive association between mood disorders and recurring utilisation of emergency department services.Reference Fehlmann, Miron-Celis, Chen, Perry and Eagles29 We also found that re-presentations were more common among those with mental health or substance use emergency department presentations (i.e. mental illness, suicidal behaviours or self-harm, alcohol and substance use), which is consistent with previous findings.Reference Leon, Cloutier, Polihronis, Zemek, Newton and Gray30 These presentations are typically indicative of inadequate emergency department or community-based care and associated with substantially higher healthcare costs.Reference Hutchinson, Curtis, McCloughen, Qian, Yu and Fethney31 This reiterates the lack of sufficient effective provision of, or engagement with, specific evidence-based interventions, such as assertive follow-up and aftercare, that directly reduce the rate of re-presentation.Reference Stanley, Brown, Brenner, Galfalvy, Currier and Knox32,Reference Zalsman, Hawton, Wasserman, van Heeringen, Arensman and Sarchiapone33 Such interventions can have major impacts on population-level rates of self-harm and suicide if taken to scale,Reference Occhipinti, Skinner, Iorfino, Lawson, Sturgess and Burgess34 yet the implementation of, and resources allocated to, these interventions vary across the healthcare system.

Higher rates of health service use, even for non-mental health reasons, in the months prior to suicide are common and provide an opportunity to engage in effective intervention and secondary prevention.Reference Ahmedani, Simon, Stewart, Beck, Waitzfelder and Rossom35 Although the reason for the relationship between mental illness and emergency department presentations due to physical illness or accident and injury is not clear, these findings support the view that improving multidisciplinary and coordinated care for young people is critical.Reference Hickie, Scott, Cross, Iorfino, Davenport and Guastella25,Reference Iorfino, Cheng, Cross, Yee, Davenport and Scott28 We know that young people who experience mental illness are more likely to develop physical illnesses, either as a direct result of mental illness and its treatment (e.g. antipsychotic medication) or due to shared genetic risk factors or other environmental factors (e.g. socioeconomic, substance use).Reference Amare, Schubert, Klingler-Hoffmann, Cohen-Woods and Baune36 Most of these factors are associated with both increased risk of suicide and contribute to increased mortality from other causes.Reference Turecki and Brent37 Thus, this work emphasises the need for greater intervention to not only reduce mortality due to suicide, but for other causes of death related to physical illnesses.Reference Plana-Ripoll, Pedersen, Agerbo, Holtz, Erlangsen and Canudas-Romo38

There are also major secondary prevention implications given that this cohort has an increased risk of developing poorer health outcomes that reach the threshold of requiring emergency care. The elevated risk of suicidal behaviours and self-harm in these populations of young people justifies broad health service-based suicide prevention strategies, such as safety planning (a documented plan for the management of risk-related behaviours should they arise), even among those without a history of such behaviours.Reference Miller, Camargo, Arias, Sullivan, Allen and Goldstein39 Further, many secondary interventions could also target factors that typically emerge during adolescence and young adulthood and contribute to an increased burden of illness and poor illness trajectories, such as alcohol and substance misuse, which accounted for over 5% of all emergency department presentations.Reference McGorry, Purcell, Goldstone and Amminger40 Critically, re-presentations for alcohol and substance misuse were most likely to occur within 28 days of a previous presentation, indicating the lack of adequate high-quality prevention and treatment among those engaged with the health system.

This study provides valuable insights into the broader patterns of health service use for a cohort of young people engaged in primary mental healthcare. The findings indicate that most young people presenting to these services experience poor mental and physical health outcomes which result in presentations to emergency departments. The preventable nature of many presentations suggests that improving the provision of multidisciplinary and coordinated ambulatory and non-urgent care to focus on reducing many of the primary and secondary risks associated with mental disorders, such as alcohol and substance misuse, suicidal thoughts and behaviours and physical illness, could substantially improve the mental and physical health outcomes of young people.

Strengths and limitations

This study utilises a large transdiagnostic youth mental health cohort and data linkage methods to provide valuable insights into the wider health service use patterns of these young people over a 10-year period. Reporting of all types of emergency department presentations (mental illness; suicidal behaviours and self-harm; alcohol and substance use; accident and injury; physical illness; and other) details the full breadth of health service needs for young people presenting for youth mental healthcare. Follow-up and linkage was systematic and included all individuals in the youth mental health cohort.

Given that our study is based on administrative data entered by clinicians, the reliability of emergency department diagnoses (i.e. reason for presentation) is unknown and should be interpreted with caution. We used the broad diagnostic classifications to improve the validity of these emergency department diagnoses, since we assume that the reliability of these broad categories would be greater than the within-group classifications. We did not collect information about the impact of other sociodemographic or clinical variables (e.g. age at onset, diagnosis), and future work should focus on trying to understand the role these other factors play in the frequency and timing of emergency department presentations. We also did not adjust for demographic variables such as age or gender in our statistical models, which could potentially affect our findings. Additionally, the time course of emergency department presentations and contacts with primary care-based youth mental health services was not assessed, so it is unclear how actively engaged an individual was with primary services at the time of an emergency department presentation. A more detailed analysis of this would provide further insights into whether emergency department presentations were commonly an entry point into care, the frequency of these visits prior to contact with other services and whether they occurred during episodes of active care. Understanding these pathways is critical to understanding whether prevention efforts are adequate at engaging young people who have never presented to services earlier in the course of illness and whether improved monitoring of those in remission or in active care is needed.

Supplementary material

Supplementary material is available online at https://doi.org/10.1192/bjo.2023.521.

Data availability

The data presented in this manuscript are available from the corresponding author on request.

Acknowledgements

We thank all the young people who participated in this study and all the staff in the Youth Mental Health Team at the University of Sydney Brain and Mind Centre, past and present, who contributed to this work.

Author contributions

F.I., C.M., E.S. and I.B.H. conceptualised the project. F.I., C.M., J.O., Y.J.C.S. and I.B.H. oversaw the methodology and administration of the project. F.I., C.M. and M.R. curated the data. S.C. and S.J. provided supervision on statistical methodology. F.I., M.R., A.S. and A.P. were involved in formal analysis, having accessed, cross-checked and validated the data. F.I., M.R. and C.M. wrote the manuscript. All authors reviewed and edited the manuscript.

Funding

This work was supported by the National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) Centre of Research Excellence for reducing suicidal thoughts and behaviours in young people presenting for healthcare (APP1171910). I.B.H. is supported by a National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) L3 Investigator Grant (GNT2016346). F.I. is supported by a NHMRC Emerging Leadership Fellowship (GNT2018157).

Declaration of interest

E.S. is Principal Research Fellow at the Brain and Mind Centre, University of Sydney and Discipline Leader of Adult Mental Health, School of Medicine, University of Notre Dame. She was the Medical Director, Young Adult Mental Health Unit, St Vincent's Hospital Darlinghurst until January 2021; she has received honoraria for educational seminars related to the clinical management of depressive disorders supported by Servier, Janssen and Eli-Lilly pharmaceuticals; has participated in a national advisory board for the antidepressant compound Pristiq, manufactured by Pfizer; and was the National Coordinator of an antidepressant trial sponsored by Servier. I.B.H. is the Co-Director, Health and Policy at the Brain and Mind Centre (BMC) University of Sydney. The BMC operates an early-intervention youth services at Camperdown under contract to headspace. He is the Chief Scientific Advisor to, and a 3.2% equity shareholder in, InnoWell Pty Ltd. InnoWell was formed as a joint venture by the University of Sydney (32% equity) and PwC (Australia; 32% equity) to deliver the $30m Australian Government-funded Project Synergy (2017–2020; a 3-year program for the transformation of mental health services) and to lead transformation of mental health services internationally through the use of innovative technologies.

References

Commission, P. Mental Health: Productivity Commission Inquiry Report. Report. Australian Government, 2020.Google Scholar
Momen, NC, Plana-Ripoll, O, Agerbo, E, Benros, ME, Børglum, AD, Christensen, MK, et al. Association between mental disorders and subsequent medical conditions. N Engl J Med 2020; 382: 1721–31.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Weye, N, Momen, NC, Christensen, MK, Iburg, KM, Dalsgaard, S, Laursen, TM, et al. Association of specific mental disorders with premature mortality in the Danish population using alternative measurement methods. JAMA Netw Open 2020; 3(6): e206646.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gibb, SJ, Fergusson, DM, Horwood, LJ. Burden of psychiatric disorder in young adulthood and life outcomes at age 30. Br J Psychiatry 2010; 197: 122–7.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Goodman, A, Joyce, R, Smith, JP. The long shadow cast by childhood physical and mental problems on adult life. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 2011; 108: 6032–7.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kilbourne, AM, Fullerton, C, Dausey, D, Pincus, HA, Hermann, RC. A framework for measuring quality and promoting accountability across silos: the case of mental disorders and co-occurring conditions. Qual Saf Health Care 2010; 19: 113–6.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Vigo, D, Thornicroft, G, Atun, R. Estimating the true global burden of mental illness. Lancet Psychiatry 2016; 3: 171–8.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
National Mental Health Commission. Contributing Lives, Thriving Communities: Report of the National Review of Mental Health Programmes and Services. Summary. National Mental Health Commission, 2014.Google Scholar
Patulny, R, Muir, K, Powell, A, Flaxman, S, Oprea, I. Are we reaching them yet? Service access patterns among attendees at the headspace youth mental health initiative. Child Adolesc Ment Health 2013; 18: 95102.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Scott, EM, Hermens, DF, Naismith, SL, White, D, Whitwell, B, Guastella, AJ, et al. Thoughts of death or suicidal ideation are common in young people aged 12 to 30 years presenting for mental health care. BMC Psychiatry 2012; 12: 234.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Iorfino, F, Hermens, DF, Cross, SPM, Zmicerevska, N, Nichles, A, Groot, J, et al. Prior suicide attempts predict worse clinical and functional outcomes in young people attending a mental health service. J Affect Disord 2018; 238: 563–9.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Iorfino, F, Carpenter, JS, Cross, SP, Crouse, J, Davenport, TA, Hermens, DF, et al. Social and occupational outcomes for young people who attend early intervention mental health services: a longitudinal study. Med J Aust 2022; 216: 8793.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hiscock, H, Neely, RJ, Lei, S, Freed, G. Paediatric mental and physical health presentations to emergency departments, Victoria, 2008–15. Med J Aust. 2018; 208: 343–8.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Perera, J, Wand, T, Bein, KJ, Chalkley, D, Ivers, R, Steinbeck, KS, et al. Presentations to NSW emergency departments with self-harm, suicidal ideation, or intentional poisoning, 2010–2014. Med J Aust 2018; 208: 348–53.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Tran, QN, Lambeth, LG, Sanderson, K, de Graaff, B, Breslin, M, Tran, V, et al. Trends of emergency department presentations with a mental health diagnosis by age, Australia, 2004–05 to 2016–17: a secondary data analysis. Emerg Med Aust 2019; 31: 1064–72.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Sawyer, SM, Patton, GC. Why are so many more adolescents presenting to our emergency departments with mental health problems? Med J Aust 2018; 208: 339–40.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Mitchell, RJ, McMaugh, A, Lystad, RP, Cameron, CM, Nielssen, O. Health service use for young males and females with a mental disorder is higher than their peers in a population-level matched cohort. BMC Health Serv Res 2022; 22(1): 1359.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McGorry, PD, Tanti, C, Stokes, R, Hickie, IB, Carnell, K, Littlefield, LK, et al. Headspace: Australia's National Youth Mental Health Foundation – where young minds come first. Med J Aust 2007; 187(suppl 7): s6870.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
McGorry, PD, Mei, C, Chanen, A, Hodges, C, Alvarez-Jimenez, M, Killackey, E. Designing and scaling up integrated youth mental health care. World Psychiatry 2022; 21: 6176.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Carpenter, JS, Iorfino, F, Cross, S, Nichles, A, Zmicerevska, N, Crouse, JJ, et al. Cohort profile: the Brain and Mind Centre Optymise cohort: tracking multidimensional outcomes in young people presenting for mental healthcare. BMJ Open 2020; 10(3): e030985.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
McHugh, C, Song, YJC, Zmicerevska, N, Crouse, J, Nichles, A, Wilson, C, et al. Premature mortality in early-intervention mental health services: a data linkage study protocol to examine mortality and morbidity outcomes in a cohort of help-seeking young people. BMJ Open 2022; 12(2): e054264.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McHugh, CM, Iorfino, F, Zmicerevska, N, Song, YJC, Skinner, A, Scott, EM, et al. Premature mortality in young people accessing early intervention youth mental healthcare: data-linkage cohort study. BJPsych Open 2023; 9(3): e76.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Fay, M. rateratio.test: Exact rate ratio test. CRAN, 2014 (https://CRAN.R-project.org/package=rateratio.test [cited 21 Feb 2022]).Google Scholar
Australian Institute of Health and Welfare. Mental Health Services Provided in Emergency Departments. AIHW, 2019 (https://www.aihw.gov.au/mental-health/topic-areas/emergency-departments).Google Scholar
Hickie, IB, Scott, EM, Cross, SP, Iorfino, F, Davenport, TA, Guastella, AJ, et al. Right care, first time: a highly personalised and measurement-based care model to manage youth mental health. Med J Aust 2019; 211(suppl 9): s346.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Iorfino, F, Scott, EM, Carpenter, JS, Cross, SP, Hermens, DF, Killedar, M, et al. Clinical stage transitions in persons aged 12 to 25 years presenting to early intervention mental health services with anxiety, mood, and psychotic disorders. JAMA Psychiatry 2019; 76: 1167–75.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Sawrikar, V, Stewart, E, LaMonica, HM, Iorfino, F, Davenport, TA, Cross, S, et al. Using staged care to provide ‘right care first time’ to people with common affective disorders. Psychiatr Serv 2021; 72: 691703.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Iorfino, F, Cheng, VWS, Cross, SP, Yee, HF, Davenport, TA, Scott, EM, et al. Right care, first time: developing a theory-based automated protocol to help clinically stage young people based on severity and persistence of mental illness. Front Public Health 2021; 9: 621862.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Fehlmann, CA, Miron-Celis, M, Chen, Y, Perry, J, Eagles, D. Association between mood disorders and frequent emergency department use: a cross-sectional study. CJEM 2022; 24: 5560.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Leon, SL, Cloutier, P, Polihronis, C, Zemek, R, Newton, AS, Gray, C, et al. Child and adolescent mental health repeat visits to the emergency department: a systematic review. Hosp Pediatr 2017; 7: 177–86.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hutchinson, CL, Curtis, K, McCloughen, A, Qian, S, Yu, P, Fethney, J. Identifying return visits to the Emergency Department: a multi-centre study. Australas Emerg Care 2021; 24: 3442.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stanley, B, Brown, GK, Brenner, LA, Galfalvy, HC, Currier, GW, Knox, KL, et al. Comparison of the safety planning intervention with follow-up vs usual care of suicidal patients treated in the emergency department. JAMA Psychiatry 2018; 75: 894900.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Zalsman, G, Hawton, K, Wasserman, D, van Heeringen, K, Arensman, E, Sarchiapone, M, et al. Suicide prevention strategies revisited: 10-year systematic review. Lancet Psychiatry 2016; 3: 646–59.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Occhipinti, JA, Skinner, A, Iorfino, F, Lawson, K, Sturgess, J, Burgess, W, et al. Reducing youth suicide: systems modelling and simulation to guide targeted investments across the determinants. BMC Med 2021; 19(1): 61.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ahmedani, BK, Simon, GE, Stewart, C, Beck, A, Waitzfelder, BE, Rossom, R, et al. Health care contacts in the year before suicide death. J Gen Intern Med 2014; 29: 870–7.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Amare, AT, Schubert, KO, Klingler-Hoffmann, M, Cohen-Woods, S, Baune, BT. The genetic overlap between mood disorders and cardiometabolic diseases: a systematic review of genome wide and candidate gene studies. Transl Psychiatry 2017; 7(1): e1007.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Turecki, G, Brent, DA. Suicide and suicidal behaviour. Lancet 2016; 387: 1227–39.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Plana-Ripoll, O, Pedersen, CB, Agerbo, E, Holtz, Y, Erlangsen, A, Canudas-Romo, V, et al. A comprehensive analysis of mortality-related health metrics associated with mental disorders: a nationwide, register-based cohort study. Lancet 2019; 394: 1827–35.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Miller, IW, Camargo, CA Jr, Arias, SA, Sullivan, AF, Allen, MH, Goldstein, AB, et al. Suicide prevention in an emergency department population: the ED-SAFE study. JAMA Psychiatry 2017; 74: 563–70.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McGorry, PD, Purcell, R, Goldstone, S, Amminger, GP. Age of onset and timing of treatment for mental and substance use disorders: implications for preventive intervention strategies and models of care. Curr Opin Psychiatry 2011; 24: 301–6.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Figure 0

Fig. 1 Emergency department (ED) presentation status among a youth mental health cohort (n = 7024).

Figure 1

Fig. 2 Distribution of total number of emergency department (ED) presentations over the course of follow-up for each individual by gender.

Figure 2

Table 1 Crude incidence for all presentations to an emergency department in the full cohort (n = 7024)

Figure 3

Table 2 Crude incidence for mental illness emergency department presentations in the full cohort (n = 7024)

Figure 4

Fig. 3 The time course for re-presentations and reason for re-presentation.

Figure 5

Fig. 4 Distributions of emergency department (ED) presentations for high utilisers (more than four presentations within a 12-month period) versus other utilisers.

Supplementary material: File

Iorfino et al. supplementary material
Download undefined(File)
File 516.2 KB
Submit a response

eLetters

No eLetters have been published for this article.