Patterns of care for chronic patients after the Italian psychiatric reform. A longitudinal case register study
Lori Viscogliosi Calabrese,
Rocco Micciolo and
Michele Tansella
Social Science & Medicine, 1990, vol. 31, issue 7, 815-822
Abstract:
A comprehensive and well-integrated community-based system of psychiatric services has been developed in South-Verona since the Italian psychiatric reform. Using the South-Verona Psychiatric Case Register, we identified chronic psychiatric patients in the community over a 6-year period after the reform. Six first-contact sociodemographic variables (sex, age, marital status, living situation, education, occupational status) and two clinical variables (ICD-9 diagnosis and past history of state psychiatric hospital admission) were studied for these patients. Four full cohort-years of post-reform chronic patients were followed for a 2-year period to determine their subsequent patterns of care. Logistic analysis was used to examine the interaction of cohort-year with outcome and the above sociodemographic and clinical variables studied individually and in combination. We found that 36.4% of post-reform chronic patients in the community remained in long-term contact with psychiatric services for 2 years after they were first identified. Logistic analysis revealed that none of the sociodemographic and clinical variables studied individually or in combination were predictive of the probability of remaining in long-term contact with community psychiatric services.
Keywords: community; psychiatry; Italian; reform; chronicity; services; utilization; psychiatric; case; registers (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 1990
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