2012
DOI: 10.1016/j.genhosppsych.2012.05.001
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Co-occurring mood disorders among hospitalized patients and risk for subsequent medical hospitalization

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Cited by 24 publications
(26 citation statements)
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References 17 publications
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“…The findings support prior studies documenting the relationship between comorbid SMI diagnoses and rehospitalization [10,13,15,17] and expand this work by highlighting poor health outcomes among persons with a comorbid SMI diagnosis in a population of patients having heterogeneous medical needs. Hospitalized patients with a comorbid SMI diagnosis likely face a complex array of barriers to quality health care including limited access to transitional support postdischarge, community-based care options, and integrated health and behavioral health care [20,21].…”
Section: Current Findingssupporting
confidence: 84%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The findings support prior studies documenting the relationship between comorbid SMI diagnoses and rehospitalization [10,13,15,17] and expand this work by highlighting poor health outcomes among persons with a comorbid SMI diagnosis in a population of patients having heterogeneous medical needs. Hospitalized patients with a comorbid SMI diagnosis likely face a complex array of barriers to quality health care including limited access to transitional support postdischarge, community-based care options, and integrated health and behavioral health care [20,21].…”
Section: Current Findingssupporting
confidence: 84%
“…As such, this study operationally defined SMI to encompass comorbid diagnoses of schizophrenia, bipolar disorder and major depression. This definition of SMI has also been used in other studies examining SMI and subsequent medical rehospitalization [17,18]. Using a 12-month look-back from the index hospitalization, we identified patients who had a comorbid SMI diagnosis using the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality multilevel clinical classification system (CCS) and included those with a diagnosis of CCS 5.8.1-bipolar disorders [International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision, Clinical Modification (ICD-9-CM) codes: 296.00-296.99], CCS 5.10-schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders (ICD-9-CM codes: 293.81, 293.82, 295.01-295.95, 29,700.0-298.0) and CCS 5.8.2-major depressive disorder (ICD-9 codes: 296.20-296.36) [6], yielding 70,858 without a comorbid SMI diagnosis and 3221 patients with a comorbid SMI diagnosis.…”
Section: Construction Of Serious Mental Illness Rehospitalization Anmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The findings support most of previous studies [5,22,38,44] for medical cohort, but conflict with previous literatures which claimed that there was no significant association between comorbid SMI and rehospitalization for surgical inpatients [28,45]. The high odds of 30-day rehospitalization among medical and surgical patients can be explained by a poor quality health care due to limited access to transitional support postdischarge, community-based care options, and integrated health and behavioral health care [46,47].…”
Section: Aim 2: Analysis Of National Readmissions With Comorbid Smisupporting
confidence: 53%
“…As such, this study operationally defined SMI to encompass comorbid diagnoses of schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, and major depression. This definition of SMI has also been used in other studies examining SMI and subsequent medical readmissions [28,38,39].…”
Section: Aim 2 Analysis: National Readmissions With Comorbid Smimentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Serious mental illness (SMI, including schizophrenia and mood disorders) is also associated with an increased risk of repeated hospitalization [7,8,9,10]. Mental illness is associated with all-cause mortality, cardiovascular hospitalizations and death in people receiving hemodialysis [11].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%