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Published Online: 17 May 2021

Patient Characteristics Associated With Admission to Low-Safety Inpatient Psychiatric Facilities: Evidence for Racial Inequities

Abstract

Objective:

The author examined patient demographic, clinical, payment, and geographic factors associated with admission to low-safety inpatient psychiatric facilities.

Methods:

Massachusetts all-payer 2017 discharge data (N=39,128 psychiatric patients) were linked to facility-level indicators of safety (N=38 facilities). A composite of safety was created by averaging standardized measures of restraint and seclusion as well as 5-year averages of overall, substantiated, and abuse-related (i.e., verbal, physical, or sexual) complaints per 1,000 discharges (α=0.73). This composite informed quintile groups of safety performance. A series of multinomial regression models were fit, with payment and geography added separately.

Results:

Notable factors independently associated with admission to low-safety facilities were belonging to a racial or ethnic minority group compared with being a White patient (for non-Hispanic Black, relative risk ratio [RRR]=1.71, p<0.01; for non-Hispanic Asian, RRR=5.60, p<0.01; for non-Hispanic “other” race, RRR=2.17, p<0.01; and for Hispanic-Latinx, RRR=1.29, p<0.01) and not having private insurance (for self-pay or uninsured, RRR=2.40, p<0.01; for Medicaid, RRR=1.80, p<0.01; and for Medicare, RRR=1.31, p<0.01).

Conclusions:

To the best of the author’s knowledge, this is the first study to examine differences in admission to low-safety inpatient psychiatric facilities. Even after accounting for potential clinical, geographic, and insurance mediators of structural racism, stark racial and ethnic inequities were found in admission to low-safety inpatient psychiatric facilities. In addition to addressing safety performance, policy makers should invest in gaining a better understanding of how differences in community-based referrals, mode of transport (e.g., police or self), and deliberate or unintentional steering and selection affect admissions and outcomes.

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Information

Published In

Go to Psychiatric Services
Go to Psychiatric Services
Psychiatric Services
Pages: 1151 - 1159
PubMed: 33993716

History

Received: 2 September 2020
Revision received: 11 October 2020
Revision received: 25 November 2020
Accepted: 23 December 2020
Published online: 17 May 2021
Published in print: October 01, 2021

Keywords

  1. Inpatient psychiatry
  2. Safety
  3. Quality
  4. Mental health
  5. Inpatient treatment
  6. Racial-ethnic disparities

Authors

Details

Morgan C. Shields, Ph.D. [email protected]
Center for Mental Health, Department of Psychiatry, Perelman School of Medicine, and Leonard Davis Institute of Health Economics, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia.

Notes

Send correspondence to Dr. Shields ([email protected]).

Competing Interests

The author reports no financial relationships with commercial interests.

Funding Information

Dr. Shields was supported by the National Institute of Mental Health (award 5T32 MH-109433) and the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (T32 AA-007567).

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