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Physical Illness in Psychiatric Patients
132
Citations
14
References
1968
Year
Psychiatric EvaluationPsychiatric DisordersMental HealthHospital MedicineMental DisordersHealth SciencesPsychiatry OverlapsMental Health ServicesPsychiatric DiseasePsychiatryCatchment Area PopulationRehabilitationClinical PsychiatryPsychiatric DisorderNursingPhysical IllnessCommunity Mental HealthGeneral PracticeMedicinePsychopathology
The practice of psychiatry overlaps appreciably that of the other branches of Medicine. A high incidence of psychiatric illness has been found in out-patients attending medical and surgical clinics (Shepherd, Davies and Culpan, 1960; and Davies, 1964), and among in-patients in general medical and surgical wards (Meyer and Mendelson, 1960; Fleminger and Mallett, 1962; Eilenberg, 1965; Granville-Grossman, 1967). Other studies have shown an appreciable incidence of physical illness in out-patients attending psychiatric clinics (Davies, 1965), in psychiatric in-patients in a teaching hospital (Marshall, 1949; and Herridge, 1960), and in patients with mental disturbance attending general practitioners (Shepherd, Cooper, Brown and Kalton, 1964, 1966). The extent to which ordinary psychiatric in-patient practice involves dealing with non-psychiatric problems does not appear to have been extensively studied, although Davies, D. W. (1964) has indicated the presence of considerable physical morbidity within a psychiatric hospital population. We here describe an investigation into the incidence of physical morbidity among in-patients admitted to a general hospital psychiatric unit with a total responsibility to a catchment area population of 90,000, and into some of the factors affecting this incidence.
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