LWL Research Institute for Mental Health, Ruhr University Bochum, LWL University Hospital, Bochum, Germany.
Department of Psychiatry, Ruhr University Bochum, LWL University Hospital, Alexandrinenstrasse 1, 44791, Bochum, Germany.
BMC Psychiatry. 2022 Feb 19;22(1):132. doi: 10.1186/s12888-022-03786-6.
Within the last five years the number of homeless persons in Germany has more than doubled, with many suffering from mental illnesses that require treatment. Whether the mental illness itself led to losing shelter or whether the state of being homeless increased the likelihood of developing symptoms of a mental disorder remains unclear. The current study assessed the interaction of homelessness and mental illness from a care provider perspective.
We conducted a retrospective analysis of inpatient routine data from 20 psychiatric hospitals in North Rhine-Westphalia (NRW), Germany, over a period of four years (N = 366,767 inpatient treatment cases). Patients were considered "homeless" if they had no fixed unique address.
About 2.4% of the analyzed cohort was classified as homeless, with increasing tendency over the study period (+14% from 2016 to 2019). The percentage of homeless patients varied broadly between the hospitals (0.2-6.3%). Homeless patients were more often male and on average eight years younger than patients with a fixed address. Homeless patients experienced more involuntary measures (admission and restraint), had a shorter course of treatment and were more often discharged within one day. Every second homeless case was diagnosed with a substance use disorder and every third homeless case with a psychotic disorder, whereas affective disorders were diagnosed less frequently in this group. Psychiatric comorbidity occurred more often in homeless patients whereas somatic diseases did not.
Multiple patient-related sociodemographic and local factors are associated with homelessness of psychiatric inpatients. In addition, clinical factors differ between homeless and non-homeless patients, pointing to more severe mental illness and treatment complications (e.g., coercive measures) in homeless persons. Thus, homelessness of psychiatric inpatients can imply special challenges that need to be considered by healthcare providers and politicians, with the goal of optimizing mental and social care and the mental health outcomes of homeless persons.
在过去五年中,德国无家可归者的人数增加了一倍多,许多人患有需要治疗的精神疾病。精神疾病本身是否导致失去住所,或者无家可归的状态是否增加了患精神障碍症状的可能性,目前尚不清楚。本研究从护理提供者的角度评估了无家可归和精神疾病之间的相互作用。
我们对德国北莱茵-威斯特法伦州(NRW)20 家精神病院在四年期间(N=366767 例住院治疗病例)的住院常规数据进行了回顾性分析。如果患者没有固定的唯一地址,则将其视为“无家可归者”。
在所分析的队列中,约有 2.4%的人被归类为无家可归者,且在研究期间呈上升趋势(2016 年至 2019 年增加了 14%)。不同医院之间无家可归患者的比例差异很大(0.2-6.3%)。无家可归患者中男性居多,平均比有固定地址的患者年轻 8 岁。无家可归患者接受非自愿治疗措施(入院和约束)的比例更高,治疗时间更短,且更常在一天内出院。每两个无家可归患者中就有一个被诊断为物质使用障碍,每三个无家可归患者中就有一个被诊断为精神病性障碍,而该组中情感障碍的诊断较少。无家可归患者的合并症更为常见,而躯体疾病则没有。
与精神病住院患者无家可归相关的患者相关社会人口统计学和局部因素有很多。此外,无家可归和非无家可归患者的临床因素也存在差异,这表明无家可归的精神病患者的病情更为严重,且治疗并发症更多(例如,强制措施)。因此,精神病住院患者的无家可归情况可能意味着需要由医疗保健提供者和政治家考虑的特殊挑战,目标是优化无家可归者的精神和社会护理以及精神健康结果。