Hospitalized Patients with Schizophrenia More Likely to Have Medical and Surgical Complications
Decreased quality of care likely to blame, researchers conclude
(March 16, 2006) -- A Johns Hopkins study of more than 1,700
patients with schizophrenia hospitalized for medical or surgical care
unrelated to their mental
disorder shows they are at least twice as likely as similar patients
without schizophrenia to suffer dangerous and expensive adverse events. The
adverse events are associated with poor outcomes, including death.
The researchers concluded that decreased quality of care given to
patients with schizophrenia may put them at higher risk for serious
infections and other complications. A report on these findings appears in
the March issue of the Archives of General Psychiatry.
"The results of our study suggest that having schizophrenia may be a
previously unrecognized or under-appreciated contributor to higher
likelihood of complications and death for patients admitted to a medical or
surgical hospital service," said Gail L. Daumit, M.D., M.H.S., an assistant
professor of medicine at The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and
first author of the report. The primary diagnoses in these cases were
conditions that required immediate medical or surgical care.
The Hopkins team, composed of investigators from the School of Medicine
and Bloomberg School of Public Health, evaluated patients discharged from
Maryland acute care hospitals following medical or surgical treatment in
2001 and 2002. The patients included 1,746 patients who had schizophrenia
and 732,210 who did not.
Using a set of standard patient safety indicators, or PSIs, developed by
the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, the team found that patients
with schizophrenia were two and one-half times more likely than
non-schizophrenics to have hospital-associated infections; two times more
likely to have postoperative respiratory failure or postoperative deep vein
blood clots, and two times more likely to suffer post-operative sepsis
(overwhelming infections throughout the body caused by toxin-producing
bacteria) than patients without schizophrenia.
In addition, patients with schizophrenia who had respiratory failure or
sepsis were twice as likely as those without respiratory failure or sepsis
to be admitted to the intensive care unit and to die.
The team also found that the median length of hospital stay for patients
with schizophrenia and adverse events was at least 10 days longer than the
stay of schizophrenics without adverse events; and median hospital charges
were at least $20,000 greater in hospitalizations with adverse events.
"Much of this increased risk could be due to variation of quality of
care," said Peter Pronovost, M.D., Ph.D., the medical director of the Center
for Innovation in Quality Patient Care and a professor in the Department of
Anesthesiology/Critical Care Medicine at Johns Hopkins University’s School
of Medicine.
"We already were aware that individuals with schizophrenia have a high
risk of premature mortality, but it wasn’t clear until now whether
complications during hospitalization were a contributing factor," Daumit
said.
Previous studies by others suggest that health care professionals might
minimize or misinterpret the medical symptoms of people with schizophrenia
and delay diagnosis and treatment of conditions requiring attention, Daumit
said. This is especially likely if these patients are
hallucinating, behaving aggressively or communicating poorly.
Other factors contributing to poor outcomes may include improper use of
restraints, excessive medication dosages and interactions of drugs used to
control schizophrenia symptoms with other medications, Daumit noted. Such
drug errors can cause over sedation, which in turn could cause respiratory
problems, such as pneumonia, she said.
"Further research is needed to evaluate the extent to which having
schizophrenia increases the risk for complications and death, and whether
they are preventable and responsive to interventions to improve quality of
care," Pronovost said. He explained that more information about health care
provider and system level factors such as communication between medical
specialties and the availability of consultation-liaison psychiatric
services would be important to target future quality improvement efforts.
PSIs are designed to help hospitals identify situations that might
require further study, according to the Hopkins researchers. AHRQ is part of
the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
Source: Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions
Last updated: 3/06
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