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Measuring the level of compulsory hospitalisation in mental health care: The performance of different measures across areas and over time

Abstract

Objective

A variety of measures are used for reporting levels of compulsory psychiatric hospitalisation. This complicates comparisons between studies and makes it hard to establish the extent of geographic variation. We aimed to investigate how measures based on events, individuals and duration portray geographical variation differently and perform over time, how they correlate and how well they predict future ranked levels of compulsory hospitalisation.
Methods

Small-area analysis, correlation analysis and linear regressions of data from a Norwegian health registry containing whole population data from 2014 to 2018.
Results

The average compulsory hospitalisation rate per 100,000 inhabitant was 5.6 times higher in the highest area, compared to the lowest, while the difference for the compulsory inpatient rate was 3.2. Population rates based on inpatients correlate strongly with rates of compulsory hospitalisations (r = 0.88) and duration (r = 0.78). 68%–81% of ranked compulsory hospitalisation rates could be explained by each area's rank the previous year.
Conclusion

There are stable differences in service delivery between catchment areas in Norway. In future research, multiple measures of the level of compulsory hospitalisation should ideally be included when investigating geographical variation. It is important that researchers describe accurately the measure upon which their results are based
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Category

Academic article

Client

  • Research Council of Norway (RCN) / 273546

Language

English

Author(s)

Affiliation

  • University of Oslo
  • University of South-Eastern Norway
  • Akershus University Hospital Trust
  • SINTEF Digital / Health Research

Year

2021

Published in

International Journal of Methods in Psychiatric Research

ISSN

1049-8931

Volume

30

Issue

3

Page(s)

1 - 11

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