Abstract
A cohort representing all first-time admissions to Danish psychiatric institutions during the period April 1, 1970 to March 31, 1971 was followed for 10 years in the psychiatric register. The cohort comprised 5,881 males and 6,856 females aged 15 years or above. The revolving door population was delineated as (1) patients with minimum four admissions and no admission or discharge period lasting for more than one fourth of the observation period or (2) patients with minimum four admissions during the first one fourth of the observation period. The incidence rate was 3.14 males and 3.55 females per 1,000. Revolving door patients were younger than others, single or divorced, and lived in larger cities. They were more frequently referred to out-patient aftercare and discharged to their own home. A male diagnostic profile of schizophrenia, demential or organic psychoses, personality disorders and abuse emerged together with a female profile of manic depressive and psychogenic psychosis and neurosis. Twenty-one point nine percent of males and 13.0% of females had more than 10 admissions and 4.5% of males and 3.7% of females spent more than 5 years in hospital. High risk group were 15-24 years old as 21% and 13% of young males respectively females became revolving door patients, and schizophrenics, as 46% of male and 30% of female schizophrenics became revolving door patients.

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