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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 19 July 2023
Schizophrenia is a chronic severe mental disorder characterized by acute decompensation episodes that may lead to hospitalization. In Portugal a previous study found a total of 25,385 hospitalizations in an 8-year period, being one of the most burdensome serious mental disorders in Portugal.Rehospitalizations (hospitalization occurring after a previous discharge due to Schizophrenia) are one of the quality-of-care indicators of schizophrenia treatment.
This project aims to describe and quantify hospitalization readmission rates in patients with schizophrenia in Portuguese public hospitals
A descriptive study was designed according to the RECORD guidelines, using a nationwide hospitalization administrative database that contains all hospitalizations registered in Portuguese mainland public hospitals. All episodes with discharges occurring between 2008 and 2015 with a primary diagnosis of Schizophrenia were selected according to the International Classification of Diseases version 9, Clinical Modification (ICD-9-CM) codes of diagnosis 295.xx. Readmission rates were estimated using a methodological approach developed by the authors that identified patients who have been rehospitalized in <=5; <=30; <=90 and <=365 days from a previous hospitalization episode during the study period. Individual patients were identified (crosschecking three variables: birthdate; sex and place of residence). The time between discharges was calculated using the difference between an index hospitalization and the next registered hospitalization from the same patient.
A total of 14,279 patients were anonymously identified in order to calculate readmission rates per patient from a total of 25,385 hospitalization episodes. The mean hospitalization per patient ratio was 1.78. A total of 367 patients (2.6%) had a readmission in <=5 days after discharge. The readmission rate at <=30 days was 8.6% (n=1224); 14.1% (n=2013) at <= 90 days and 23.7% (n=3378) at <=365 days. Readmission rates were higher in male sex patients. Shorter periods of time between readmissions were increasingly frequent in male patients (3.1% vs. 1.6% of all male vs. all female patients in <=5days readmissions; 9.6% vs. 6.5% in <=30 days readmissions; 15.7% vs. 11.0% in <=90days readmissions and 25.3% vs. 20.4% in <=365days readmissions).
Rehospitalizations arise as one of the indicators of treatment failure and quality of care in patients with a diagnosis of schizophrenia. Our study is the first to measure and assess readmission rates in patients with Schizophrenia in Portuguese public hospitals at a nationwide level. Portugal presents lower 30-day readmission values when compared to other countries. The 30-day readmission rate in patients with Schizophrenia in Portuguese Public Hospitals is 8.6% and male patients have higher readmission rates when compared to female patients.
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