Comparing the characteristcs of hospitalized patients admitted in involuntary or voluntary treatment after first episode psychosis
F. Leitão, S. A. Pinho, S. Sousa, J. Loureiro, C. Cunha, J. R. Silva, G. França, N. Oliveira, P. M. Ferreira, A. M. Moreira

TL;DR
This study compares patients hospitalized involuntarily or voluntarily for their first psychotic episode, finding differences in untreated psychosis duration, substance abuse, and re-hospitalization rates.
Contribution
The study provides a comparative analysis of clinical characteristics between involuntary and voluntary hospitalization for first-episode psychosis under Portuguese mental health law.
Findings
Involuntary patients had longer untreated psychosis (71 vs 38 weeks) and higher substance abuse rates (53% vs 36%).
Depot antipsychotics were more commonly prescribed at discharge for involuntary patients (58% vs 12%).
Involuntary patients had higher re-hospitalization rates (28% vs 16%).
Abstract
Individuals experiencing psychotic symptoms often lack insight into their conditions, especially in first psychotic episodes. According to the Portuguese Mental Health Law, involuntary hospitalization may be necessary in cases of severe mental disorder, involving a threat to the patient or his/her legal assets, when there is a refusal of the necessary treatment. The aim of our study was to characterize patients admitted involuntarily for first psychotic episode and to compare them with the patients undergoing inpatient voluntary treatment. Out of a total of 87 patients diagnosed with first psychotic episode, hospitalized between 2020 and 2022 in our service, at Hospital Magalhães Lemos, 65 were included in the study. Exclusion criteria included patients from other residential areas. 40 patients were admitted under involuntary treatment, whereas 25 were hospitalized voluntarily. For…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHealthcare Decision-Making and Restraints · Mental Health and Psychiatry · Psychotherapy Techniques and Applications
