The Scottish Survey of New Chronic In-patients: Two Year Follow Up

Abstract
‘New chronic inpatients' (patients aged 18–64 years in hospital more than one but less than six years) were followed-up two years after identification in the catchment areas of 14 psychiatric hospitals, serving 56% of the Scottish population. Nine per cent had died, 71% remained in-patients, and 20% had been discharged; 40% of those discharged had no contact with after-care services, and 37% of those remaining in hospital did not need in-patient care. Discharged patients were younger, had been in hospital a shorter time, and less often had organic brain disease. Only 13% of patients who, when first identified, had been rated at a low functioning level had been discharged; 64% of those remaining in-patients at follow up had such a rating.

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