Emergency psychiatry is the clinical application
of
psychiatry in
emergency settings. Conditions requiring
psychiatric interventions may include attempted
suicide,
substance
abuse,
depression,
psychosis, violence or other rapid
changes in behavior. Psychiatric emergency
services are rendered by professionals in the fields of
medicine,
nursing,
psychology and
social
work. The demand for emergency psychiatric services has rapidly
increased throughout the
world since the
1960s, especially in
urban areas. Care for patients in situations
involving emergency psychiatry is complex. Professionals working in
psychiatric emergency service settings are usually under a high
risk of violence due to the mental state of their patients.
Individuals may arrive in such a setting through their own
voluntary request, a referral from another health professional, or
through
involuntary
commitment. Care of patients requiring psychiatric intervention
usually encompasses crisis stabilization of many serious and
life-threatening conditions which could include acute or chronic
mental disorders or symptoms similar
to those conditions.
Definition
Symptoms and conditions behind psychiatric emergencies may include
attempted suicide,
substance
dependence,
alcohol
intoxication, acute
depression, presence of
delusions, violence,
panic
attacks, and significant, rapid changes in behavior. Emergency
psychiatry exists to identify and/or
treat these symptoms and
psychiatric conditions. In addition, several rapidly lethal medical
conditions present themselves with common psychiatric symptoms. A
physician's ability to identify and
intervene with these and other medical conditions is
critical.
Delivery of psychiatric emergency services
The place where emergency psychiatric services are delivered are
commonly referred to as Psychiatric Emergency Services, Psychiatric
Emergency Care Centres, or Comprehensive Psychiatric Emergency
Programs.
Mental health
professionals from a wide area of disciplines, including
medicine,
nursing,
psychology, and
social work work in these settings alongside
psychiatrists and emergency
physicians. The facilities, sometimes housed in a
psychiatric hospital,
psychiatric ward, or
emergency room,
provide immediate treatment to both voluntary and involuntary
patients
24 hours a day. Within a protected
environment, psychiatric emergency services exists to provide brief
stay of two or three days to gain a diagnostic clarity, find
appropriate alternatives to psychiatric hospitalization for the
patient, and to treat those patients whose symptoms can be improved
within that brief period of time. Even precise, psychiatric
diagnoses are a secondary priority compared with interventions in a
crisis setting. The functions of psychiatric emergency services are
to assess patients' problems, implement a short-term treatment
consisting of no more than ten meetings with the patient, procure a
24 hour holding area, mobilize teams to carry out interventions at
patients' residences, utilize emergency management services to
prevent further crises, be aware of inpatient and outpatient
psychiatric resources, and provide 24/7
telephone counseling.
History
Since the
1960s the demand for emergency psychiatric
services has endured a rapid growth due to deinstitutionalization both in
Europe and the United States
, increases in the number medical specialties, and
the multiplication of transitory treatment options, such as
psychiatric
medication. The actual number of psychiatric emergencies
has also increased significantly, especially in psychiatric
emergency service settings located in
urban
areas. Psychiatric emergency services attracted unemployed,
homeless and other disenfranchised populations due to its
characteristics of accessibility, convenience, and anonymity
policies. While many of the patients who used psychiatric emergency
services shared common sociological and demographic
characteristics, the symptoms and needs expressed did not conform
to any single psychiatric profile. The individualized care needed
for patients utilizing psychiatric emergency services is evolving,
requiring an always changing and sometimes complex treatment
approach.
Hospital admission

The emergency care process.
The staff will need to determine if the patient needs to be
admitted to a psychiatric inpatient facility or if they can be
safety discharged to the community after a period of observation
and/or brief treatment. Initial emergency psychiatric evaluations
usually involve patients who are acutely agitated,
paranoid, or who are suicidal. Initial evaluations
to determine admission and interventions are designed to be as
therapeutic as possible.
Involuntary commitment
Involuntary commitment, or
sectioning, refers to situations where
police officers, health officers, or
health professional classify an
individual as dangerous to themselves or others and mentally ill
according to the applicable government law for the region. After an
individual is transported to a psychiatric emergency service
setting, a preliminary professional assessment is completed which
may or may not result in
involuntary treatment. Some patients
may be discharged shortly after being brought to psychiatric
emergency services while others will require longer observation and
the need for continued involuntary commitment will exist. While
some patients may initially come voluntarily, it may be realized
that they pose a risk to themselves or others and involuntary
commitment may be initiated at that point.
Referrals and voluntary hospitalization
Voluntary hospitalizations are outnumbered by involuntary
commitments partly due to the fact insurance companies tend not to
pay for hospitalization unless an imminent danger exists to the
individual or community. In addition, psychiatric emergency service
settings admit approximately one third of patients from
assertive community treatment
centers.
Types of psychiatric emergencies
Suicide attempts and suicidal thoughts
As of 2000, the
World Health
Organization estimated one million suicides each year in the
world. There are countless more suicide attempts. Psychiatric
emergency service settings exist to treat the mental disorders
associated with an increased risk of completed suicide or suicide
attempts. Mental health professionals in these settings are
expected to predict acts of violence patients may commit against
themselves (or others), even though the complex factors leading to
a suicide stem from so many sources, including psychosocial,
biological, interpersonal, anthropological and religious. These
mental health professionals will use any resources available to
them to determine risk factors, make an overall assessment, and
decide on any necessary treatment.
Violent behavior
Aggression can be the result of both internal and external factors
that create a measurable activation in the
autonomic nervous system. This
activation can become evident through symptoms such as the
clenching of fists or jaw, pacing, slamming doors, hitting palms of
hands with wrists, or being easily startled. It is estimated that
17% of visits to psychiatric emergency service settings are
homicidal in origin and an additional 5%
involve both suicide and homicide. Violence is also associated with
many conditions such as
acute
intoxication, acute psychosis
paranoid personality disorder,
antisocial personality
disorder,
narcissistic personality
disorder, and
borderline personality
disorder. Additional risk factors have also been identified
which may lead to violent behavior. Such risk factors may include
prior arrests, presence of hallucinations, delusions, or other
neurological impairment, being uneducated, unmarried,
poor or
male. Mental health
professionals complete violence risk assessments to determine both
security measures and treatments for the patient.
Psychosis
Patients with
psychotic symptoms are
common in psychiatric emergency service settings. The determination
of the source of the psychosis can be difficult. Sometimes patients
brought into the setting in a psychotic state have been
disconnected from their previous treatment plan. While the
psychiatric emergency service setting will not be able to provide
long term care for these type of patients, it can exist to provide
a brief respite and reconnect the patient to their case manager
and/or reintroduce necessary psychiatric medication. A visit to a
crisis unit by a patient suffering from a chronic mental disorder
may also indicate the existence of an undiscovered precipitant,
such as change in the lifestyle of the individual, or a shifting
medical condition. These considerations can play a part in an
improvement to an existing treatment plan..
An individual could also be suffering from an acute onset of
psychosis. Such conditions can be prepared for diagnosis by
obtaining a medical or psychopathological history of a patient,
performing a
mental status
examination, conducting
psychological testing, obtaining
neuroimages, and obtaining other
neurophysiologic measurements. Following this, the mental health
professional can perform a
differential diagnosis and prepare
the patient for treatment. Like with other patient care
considerations, the origins of acute psychosis can be difficult to
determine because of the mental state of the patient. However,
acute psychosis is classified as a medical emergency requiring
immediate and complete attention. The lack of identification and
treatment can result in suicide, homicide, or other violence.
Substance dependence, abuse and intoxication
Another common cause of psychotic symptoms is substance
intoxication. These acute symptoms may resolve after a period of
observation or limited psychopharmacological treatment. However the
underlying issues, such as substance dependence or abuse, is
difficult to treat in the emergency room. Both acute
alcohol intoxication as well as other forms of
substance abuse can require psychiatric interventions. Acting as a
depressant of the
central nervous system, the early
effects of
alcohol are usually desired for
and characterized by increased talkativeness, giddiness, and a
loosening of social inhibitions. Besides considerations of impaired
concentration, verbal and motor performance, insight, judgment and
short term memory loss which could result in
behavioral change causing injury or death,
levels of alcohol below 60 milligrams per deciliter of blood are
usually considered non-lethal. However, individuals at 200
milligrams per deciliter of blood are considered grossly
intoxicated and concentration levels at 400 milligrams per
deciliter of blood are lethal, causing complete
anesthesia of the
respiratory system. Beyond the dangerous
behavioral changes that occur after the consumption of certain
amounts of alcohol, idioyncratic intoxication could occur in some
individuals even after the consumption of relatively small amounts
of alcohol. Episodes of this impairment usually consist of
confusion, disorientation, delusions and visual
hallucinations, increased aggressiveness,
rage, agitation and violence. Chronic
alcoholics may also suffer from alcoholic
hallucinosis, wherein the cessation of prolonged drinking may
trigger auditory hallucinations. Such episodes can last for a few
hours or an entire week.
Antipsychotics are often used to treat these
symptoms.
Patients may also be treated for substance abuse following the
administration of
psychoactive substances containing
amphetamine,
caffeine,
tetrahydrocannabinol,
cocaine,
phencyclidines, or other
inhalants,
opioids,
sedatives,
hypnotics,
anxiolytics,
psychedelics,
dissociatives and deliriants. Clinicians assessing and treating
substance abusers must establish therapeutic rapport to counter
denial and other negative attitudes directed
towards treatment. In addition, the clinician must determine
substances used, the route of administration, dosage, and time of
last use to determine the necessary short and long term treatments.
An appropriate choice of treatment setting must also be determined.
These settings may include outpatient facilities, partial
hospitals, residential treatment centers, or hospitals. Both the
immediate and long term treatment and setting is determined by the
severity of dependency and seriousness of physiological
complications arising from the abuse.
Hazardous drug reactions and interactions
Overdose,
drug interactions, and dangerous reactions
from psychiatric medications, especially antipsychotics, are
considered psychiatric emergencies.
Neuroleptic malignant
syndrome is a potentially lethal complication of first or
second generation antipsychotics. If untreated, neuroleptic
malignant syndrome can result in fever, muscle rigidity, confusion,
unstable vital signs, or even death.
Serotonin syndrome can result when
selective
serotonin reuptake inhibitors or
monoamine oxidase inhibitors mix
with
buspirone. Severe symptoms of
serotonin syndrome include
hyperthermia, delirium, and
tachycardia that may lead to shock. Often
patients with severe general medical symptoms, such as unstable
vital signs, will be transferred to a general medical emergency
room or medicine service for increased monitoring.
Personality disorders
Disorders manifesting dysfunction in areas related to
cognition,
affectivity, interpersonal functioning
and impulse control can be considered
personality disorders. Patients
suffering from a personality disorder will usually not complain
about symptoms resulting from their disorder. Patients suffering an
emergency phase of a personality disorder may showcase combative or
suspicious behavior, suffer from brief psychotic episodes, or be
delusional. Compared with outpatient settings and the general
population, the prevalence of individuals suffering from
personality disorders in inpatient psychiatric settings is usually
7–25% higher. Clinicians working with such patients attempt to
stabilize the individual to their baseline level of function.
Anxiety
Patients suffering from an extreme case of anxiety may seek
treatment when all support systems have been exhausted and they are
unable to bear the anxiety. Feelings of anxiety may present in
different ways from an underlying medical illness or psychiatric
disorder, a secondary functional disturbance from another
psychiatric disorder, from a primary psychiatric disorder such as
panic disorder or
generalized anxiety disorder,
or as a result of stress from such conditions as
adjustment disorder or
post-traumatic stress
disorder. Clinicians usually attempt to first provide a "safe
harbor" for the patient so that assessment processes and treatments
can be adequately facilitated. The initiation of treatments for
mood and anxiety disorders are important as patients suffering from
anxiety disorders have a higher risk of premature death.
Disasters
Natural disasters and
man-made hazards can cause severe
psychological stress in victims surrounding the event.
Emergency management often includes
psychiatric emergency services designed to help victims cope with
the situation. The impact of disasters can cause people to feel
shocked, overwhelmed, immobilized, panic-stricken, or confused.
Hours, days, months and even years after a disaster, individuals
can experience tormenting memories, vivid nightmares, develop
apathy, withdrawal, memory lapses, fatigue, loss of appetite,
insomnia, depression, irritability, panic attacks, or dysphoria.
Due to the typically disorganized and hazardous environment
following a disaster, mental health professionals typically assess
and treat patients as rapidly as possible. Unless a condition is
threatening life of the patient, or others around the patient,
other medical and basic survival considerations are managed first.
Soon after a disaster clinicians may make themselves available to
allow individuals to ventilate to relieve feelings of isolation,
helplessness and vulnerability. Dependent upon the scale of the
disaster, many victims may suffer from both chronic or acute
post-traumatic stress
disorder. Patients suffering severely from this disorder often
are admitted to psychiatric hospitals to stabilize the
individual.
Abuse
Incidents of
physical,
sexual abuse or
rape can
result in dangerous outcomes to the victim of the criminal act.
Victims may suffer from extreme anxiety, fear, helplessness,
confusion, eating or sleeping disorders, hostility, guilt and
shame. Managing the response usually encompasses coordinating
psychological, medical and legal considerations. Dependent upon
legal requirements in the region, mental health professionals may
be required to report criminal activity to a police force. Mental
health professionals will usually gather identifying data during
the initial assessment and refer the patient, if necessary, to
receive medical treatment. Medical treatment may include a
physical examination, collection of
medicolegal evidence, and determination of the risk of
pregnancy, if applicable.
Treatment
Treatments in psychiatric emergency service settings are typically
transitory in nature and only exist to provide dispositional
solutions and/or to stabilize life-threatening conditions. Once
stabilized, patients suffering chronic conditions may be
transferred to a setting which can provide long term
psychiatric rehabilitation.
Prescribed treatments within the emergency service setting vary
dependent upon the patient's condition. Different forms of
psychiatric medication,
psychotherapy,
or
electroconvulsive
therapy may be used in the emergency setting.

A patient receiving an intravenous
infusion.
The introduction and efficacy of psychiatric medication as a
treatment option in psychiatry has reduced the utilization of
physical restraints in emergency settings, by reducing dangerous
symptoms resulting from acute exacerbation of mental illness or
substance intoxication.
Medications
With time as a critical aspect of emergency psychiatry, the
rapidity of effect is an important consideration.
Pharmacokinetics is the movement of drugs
through the body with time and is at least partially reliant upon
the
route of administration,
absorption,
distribution and
metabolism of the medication. A common route of
administration is oral administration, however if this method is to
work the drug must be able to get to the stomach and stay there. In
cases of
vomiting and nausea this method of
administration is not an option.
Suppositories can, in some situations, be
administered instead. Medication can also be administered through
intramuscular injection, or
through
intravenous injection.
The amount of time required for absorption varies dependent upon
many factors including drug
solubility,
gastrointestinal
motility and
pH. If a medication is administered orally the amount of
food in the stomach may also affect the rate of
absorption. Once absorbed medications must be distributed
throughout the body, or usually with the case of psychiatric
medication, past the
blood-brain
barrier to the
brain. With all of these
factors affecting the rapidity of effect, the time until the
effects are evident varies. Generally, though, the timing with
medications is relatively fast and can occur within several
minutes. As an example, physicians usually expect to see a
remission of symptoms thirty minutes after
haloperidol, an antipsychotic, is administered
intramuscularly.
Psychotherapy
Other treatment methods may be used in psychiatric emergency
service settings.
Brief psychotherapy
can be used to treat acute conditions or immediate problems as long
as the patient understands his or her issues are psychological, the
patient trusts the physician, the physician can encourage hope for
change, the patient has motivation to change, the physician is
aware of the psychopathological history of the patient, and the
patient understands that their confidentiality will be respected.
The process of brief therapy under emergency psychiatric conditions
includes the establishment of a primary complaint from the patient,
realizing psychosocial factors, formulating an accurate
representation of the problem, coming up with ways to solve the
problem, and setting specific goals. The information gathering
aspect of brief psychotherapy is therapeutic because it helps the
patient place his or her problem in the proper perspective. If the
physician determines that deeper psychotherapy sessions are
required, he or she can transition the patient out of the emergency
setting and into an appropriate clinic or center.
ECT
Electroconvulsive therapy
is a controversial form of treatment which is sometimes applied in
psychiatric emergency service settings. Instances wherein a patient
is depressed to such a severe degree that the patient cannot be
stopped from hurting himself or herself or when a patient refuses
to swallow, eat or drink medication, electroconvulsive therapy
could be used as a therapeutic alternative. While preliminary
research suggests that electroconvulsive therapy may be an
effective treatment for depression, it usually requires a course of
six to twelve sessions of convulsions lasting at least 20 seconds
for those antidepressant effects to occur.
See also
References
- De Clercq, M.; Lamarre, S.; Vergouwen, H. (1998). Emergency
Psychiatry and Mental Health Policty: An International Point of
View. New York: Elsevier.
- Currier, G.W. New Developments in Emergency Psychiatry:
Medical, Legal, and Economic. (1999). San Francisco:
Jossey-Bass Publishers.
- Hillard, R. & Zitek, B. (2004). Emergency
Psychiatry. New York: McGraw-Hill.
- Allen, M.H. (1995). The Growth and Specialization of
Emergency Psychiatry. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass
Publishers.
- Hillard, J.R. (1990). Manual of Clinical Emergency
Psychiatry. Washington D.C.: American Psychiatric Press
- Bassuk, E.L. & Birk, A.W. (1984). Emergency Psychiatry:
Concepts, Methods, and Practices. New York: Plenum Press.
- Lipton, F.R. & Goldfinger, S.M. (1985). Emergency
Psychiatry at the Crossroads. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass
Publishers.
- Hedges, D. & Burchfield, C. (2006). Mind, Brain, and
Drug: An Introduction to Psychopharmacology. Boston: Pearson
Education.
- American Psychiatric Association. (2000). Diagnostic and
Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders: Fourth Edition.
Washington D.C.: American Psychiatric Publishing.
- Walker, J.I. (1983) Psychiatric Emergencies.
Philadelphia: J.B. Lippincott.
- Rund, D.A., & Hutzler, J.C. (1983). Emergency
Psychiatry. St. Louis: The C.V. Mosby Company.
- Potter, M. (2007, May 31). Setting the Standards: Human Rights and Health -
Mental Health. Northern Ireland Human Rights
Commission.
- Holford, N.H.G., & Sheiner, L.B. (1981). Pharmacokinetic
and pharmacodynamic modeling in vivo. CRC Critical Reviews in
Bioengineering, 5, 273–322.
Further reading
- Nurius, P.S. (1983). Emergency psychiatric services: a study of
changing utilization patterns and issues. International Journal
of Psychiatry in Medicine, 13, 239–254.
- Otong-Antai, D. (2001). Psychiatric Emergencies. Eau
Claire: PESI Healthcare.
- Sanchez, Federico, (2007), "Suicide Explained, A
Neuropsychological Approach."
External links