Psychiatric Aftercare in a Metropolitan Setting

Abstract
In the face of the trend toward brief hospitalization, rising re-admission rates and other indices of poor community adjustment, concern has developed about the adequacy of psychiatric aftercare services. The authors report on a comprehensive study of psychiatric aftercare in a large metropolitan area (population 2.5 million). The study followed prospectively a group of 747 patients, representative of a significant proportion of patients in the care system. The findings document inadequacies in hospital-based discharge planning, unbalanced use of aftercare services and poor patient outcomes six months and two years post-discharge. The study found heavy reliance on medical/therapeutic aftercare services with a relative neglect of housing, vocational/educational, financial and social/recreational services. Despite the large volume of medical/therapeutic service use, the patient group had a high readmission rate, high levels of symptomatology and poor social adjustment on follow-up. The authors suggest that community-based practitioners with specialized training in psychiatric rehabilitation would improve the system of aftercare.

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