Publication | Closed Access
What Happens to Patients After Five Years of Intensive Case Management Stops?
54
Citations
11
References
1990
Year
Chronic PatientsHospital MedicinePrimary CareSepsisAcute Care SurgeryMainstream Cmhc ServicesHealth Services ResearchHealth SciencesIntegrated CarePsychiatryAcute CareOutcomes ResearchCritical Care ManagementNursingPalliative CareCommunity Mental HealthMental Health NursingConstant 1979Case ManagementPatient SafetyPatient ManagementMedicineEmergency Medicine
Seventy-two patients who received five years of intensive case management services were transferred into mainstream community mental health center services with a much higher patient-to-staff ratio. At the end of a two-year follow-up, 91 percent of the patients were still receiving treatment. Compared with the previous five years, hospitalizations during the follow-up period increased, but not significantly so. Contacts with mainstream CMHC services increased significantly. Overall costs in constant 1979 dollars showed a nonsignificant decrease, dropping by about $1,500 per patient per year. The staff time and resources gained by the programmatic changes were used to treat a larger number of chronic patients seeking services.
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