Involuntary psychiatric admission: The referring general practitioners’ assessment of patients’
dangerousness and need for psychiatric hospital treatment
Engelsk titel: Involuntary psychiatric admission: The referring general practitioners’ assessment of patients’
dangerousness and need for psychiatric hospital treatment
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Författare:
Rötvold, Ketil
;
Wynn, Rolf
Email: Rolf.wynn@gmail.com;
Språk: Eng
Antal referenser: 45
Dokumenttyp:
Artikel
UI-nummer: 15113690
Sammanfattning
Background: In Norway, GPs may decide to refer patients to involuntary psychiatric treatment.
Internationally, there has been a discussion regarding criteria for involuntary admission. In Norway
and in other countries where the treatment criterion is still used, some have suggested its removal.
Aims: To examine which legal criteria GPs used to refer patients to involuntary admission, whether
they had thought about using a different criterion, and on which information they based their decision.
Methods: A total of 74 doctors who had referred patients to involuntary admission at one major
Norwegian psychiatric hospital participated in semi-structured interviews. Results: In total, 38% (28)
had applied the danger criterion only and 23% (17) had applied the treatment criterion only; 32% (24)
had applied both criteria, while 7% (5) did not answer this question; 74% (55) said that they could not
have chosen a different criterion; 45% (33) had based their decision on events/behaviour prior to and
during the consultation, 43% (32) on events prior to the consultation only, and 8% (6) on information
obtained during the consultation only; 4% (3) did not answer this question. None had used tools to aid
in the assessment of danger. Clinical implications: The danger criterion was frequently used by the
referring GPs. It is unclear how a removal of the treatment criterion from Norwegian legislation might
impact clinical practice. Conclusions: While the danger criterion was applied by a majority, the
treatment criterion was also chosen by many and was of importance to the doctors’ reasoning
regarding referrals to involuntary admission. Most thought they could not have chosen a different
criterion.