Long stay patients in a psychiatric hospital in Lagos, Nigeria.

Journal: African journal of psychiatry

Volume: 11

Issue: 2

Year of Publication: 2016

Affiliated Institutions:  Psychiatric Hospital, Yaba, Lagos, Nigeria.

Abstract summary 

In the face of recently introduced government health reform and the dwindling number of available beds for acutely ill patients, a cross sectional study was carried out on long-stay patients at the 100 years old psychiatric hospital Yaba, Lagos, Nigeria with a view to discharging most of them.Necessary consent was obtained from the Hospital Research and Ethical Committee. All the long-stay patients were evaluated with a specially designed proforma to elicit socio-demographic, clinical and long-stay variables. Further more, each of them had clinical assessment to make diagnosis in accordance with ICD - 10 and finally, the subjects were also assessed with the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS).Fifty-one (51) subjects; that is, occupying 10.7% of the hospital functional beds fulfilled the criteria of long-stay. They included 36 (70.6%) males and 15(24.4%) females. The mean age was 47.3 inverted exclamation markA16.5 years with age range of 18-92 years. The average length of stay was 11.4 inverted exclamation markA15.0 years and range of 0.5 to 57 years; with significant gender difference (males higher than females) (t =3.51, p<0.02). The vast majority of the subjects were diagnosed with schizophrenia (84.3%), followed by mental retardation with seizure disorder (5.9%). One-third (33.3%) of the subjects had co-morbid physical pathologies most especially epilepsies, hypertension, Koch inverted exclamation mark s disease, HIV/AIDS. Despite being on high doses of antipsychotics (conventional and/or atypical) the majority of the subjects (86.3%) exhibited poor mental state with BPRS scores of inverted exclamation markY10. The mean BPRS score was 23.6 inverted exclamation markA22.0 and range of 4-56 with a significant gender difference (t = 3.66, p< 0.02).These patients would continue to require long-stay hospitalization despite been a burden to the study center; or, in the alternative provision of mid Cway facilities for their rehabilitation.

Authors & Co-authors:  Taiwo H H Ladapo O O Aina O F OF Lawal R A RA Adebiyi O P OP Olomu S O SO Aina R B RB

Study Outcome 

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Statistics
Citations : 
Authors :  7
Identifiers
Doi : 
SSN : 1994-8220
Study Population
Males
Mesh Terms
Cross-Sectional Studies
Other Terms
Study Design
Cross Sectional Study,
Study Approach
Country of Study
Niger
Publication Country
United States