The impact of psychiatric decision units on mental health crisis care pathways: a synthetic control study
Paris Pariza, Izzy Hatfield, Lucy P. Goldsmith, Xiaochen Ge, Jared G. Smith, Katie Anderson, Chloe Crowe, Heather Jarman, Sonia Johnson, Jo Lomani, David McDaid, A.-La Park, Kati J. Turner, Geraldine M. Clarke, Steve Gillard

TL;DR
This study examines the impact of psychiatric decision units on mental health crisis care in England, finding mixed effects and a shorter length of hospital stays.
Contribution
The study introduces a novel application of the synthetic control method to evaluate psychiatric decision units in mental health crisis care.
Findings
PDUs were associated with a 24.9% reduction in psychiatric emergency department presentations in Sheffield.
Meta-analyses showed a significantly lower mean length of stay for psychiatric admissions in trusts with PDUs.
Effects varied across locations, likely due to differences in PDU configuration and implementation.
Abstract
Psychiatric crisis care is under great pressure, with the number of psychiatric presentations to emergency departments increasing and inpatient wards operating with occupancy rates above recommended levels. Internationally, hospital-based short-stay crisis units (named Psychiatric Decision Units; (PDU) in the UK) have been introduced to address these challenges, but the current evidence for their effectiveness is limited. We estimated the effects of PDUs in four geographic locations in England, linked to three National Health Service (NHS) mental health trusts and six NHS acute hospital trusts. Using national data sets to create synthetic controls from areas without PDUs (following the generalised synthetic control method), we estimated trust-wide changes to the primary outcomes of psychiatric inpatient admissions and psychiatric presentations to emergency departments (ED), compared to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPsychiatric care and mental health services · Schizophrenia research and treatment · Emergency and Acute Care Studies
