Mortality variations among public mental health patients

Abstract
Earlier studies of mortality of psychiatric patients are reviewed, and agreements and inconsistencies related to age, sex, diagnosis and cause of death are noted. The authors then analyze 5268 deaths during a 5-year period of current or former patients in Missouri [USA] public psychiatric hospitals and mental health clinics, calculating mortality ratios that are simultaneously age-, sex-, diagnostic-, and cause-specific. The results are used to construct a quantitative model. The ratios vary most with cause, then diagnosis, least with sex. Influenza and pneumonia contribute most to patient mortality; patient death rates for cancer are lower than population rates at all ages. There are substantial interactions of diagnosis with cause and sex. Among those diagnosed organic brain syndrome, who have the highest overall ratios, the ratios are extra high for females and for influenza and pneumonia, relatively low for external causes.

This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit: