scholarly journals L'Emploi de la Thioridazine Dans Un Service D'urgence et de Traitement Psychiatrique a Domicile

1966 ◽  
Vol 11 (4) ◽  
pp. 314-323
Author(s):  
H. Langevin ◽  
J. N. Fortin ◽  
F. Léonard

This paper describes the activities of a home treatment program for psychiatric patients. In 1962 the Canadian Mental Health Association, Quebec Division, awarded a grant to the Notre-Dame Hospital for the establishment of a Home-Care Program and Emergency Psychiatric Service. To demonstrate the type of patient admitted to this newly established service and the results obtained, special records were compiled for 69 patients for the purpose of a study. All patients were admitted at random to the investigation and all received thioridazine, the drug employed by the service because of its reported margin of safety. Diagnostically, the patient population can be grouped into four separate categories: a) Schizophrenic reaction 38 patients b) Depressive reaction 20 patients c) Anxiety reaction 6 patients d) Character disorder 5 patients Total 69 patients The dosage range of thioridazine varied from 10 mg. t.i.d. to 200 mg. t.i.d. depending upon the severity of the symptoms with a mean average of 25 to 50 mg. A beneficial effect was noted in 74% of the patients. The data presented describing the cooperation of the patients and their environment towards treatment of the psychiatric disorder, clearly demonstrate that the treatment prescribed had to overcome many difficulties. Most patients were unco-operative and there was also strong resistance towards the treatment of the patient by his family. In conclusion, the therapeutic results are gratifying. This is especially so in view of the majority of the patients who were not co-operative or severely ill who would never have obtained a psychiatric consultation were it not for the Home-Care Psychiatric Service. The lack of serious side effects and therapeutic effectiveness of thioridazine observed during this trial contributed to the improvement of the patient population. Many questions should be raised concerning home treatment or house call by psychiatrists. The experience of the service can be termed a research experiment by only the broadest interpretation. The most important appear evident in our concluding observations: 1) Home treatment could reach a large segment of people who otherwise would not receive treatment and are in need of it. 2) The co-operation and motivation of the patient is not necessarily a pre-requisite for treatment as it was previously believed. 3) The use of auxiliary services, social agencies and drug therapy facilitate the treatment. 4) A better understanding of the institution—the family, will be required in the near future. The meaning of the coined words ‘family crisis’ is still esoteric and should be defined according to scientific measurable standards. The psychiatrist, in order to proceed with the treatment depends on the family and must allow the family to depend on him, with the implication that he must do certain things according to the way of the family. An acute situation resulting either in a psychotic breakdown and/or emergency call must be understood as a communication between the patient and the ‘milieu’. The crisis provoked is a message of the distress of the patient, which means despite the negativistic facade that the patient wished to be helped. It has also been our experience that the family resorts to the service with the concealed desire to have a witness to their situation. The psychiatrist then becomes the ‘pacifier’ by only his presence, whether he takes a direct active role or not. Repeated crises have appeared to us as a means to solve difficult problems in front of a passive outsider — thus the family dynamics were operative towards seeking a solution and integrative measures. In other words, if an individual demands attention the same can be said for a family, which explains many additional visits required in certain cases. 5) The role and change in the therapist as a result of the home visit will ensue. It is quite clear that the fact of the role reversal, that the patient is the host and the psychiatrist the visitor, unlike the situation in the office, places the onus and burden on the psychiatrist. The use of manipulation which then becomes a social prescription can be attained if only communication is established between the family and the psychiatrist. In many instances various members of the team are better suited for the initial visit at the onset of treatment be it a nurse, a social worker, or a doctor. The establishment of a therapeutic alliance should be the major objective but additional knowledge must be gained before principles are clearly outlined in this area.

1985 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 37-44 ◽  
Author(s):  
Frank J. Brescia ◽  
Matthew Sadof ◽  
Janice Barstow

This is a retrospective study of patients who died in the Overlook Hospice Home Care Program during a six-month period. Parameters to define and document quality palliative care were measured and differences between the patient population who died at home and those who died in the hospital setting were also recorded. Among the patients who died at home, there was no symptom complex which was perceived as unmanageable by the patient's family, nurse, or physician. We could not predict which patients would be able to die at home in this study. In the future, more complete documentation of patient status, specific symptoms, and whether these symptoms are relieved will be necessary.


Author(s):  
Maria Galogavrou ◽  
Elpis Hatziagorou ◽  
Petrina Vantsi ◽  
Ilketra Toulia ◽  
Elisavet-Anna Chrysochoou ◽  
...  

PEDIATRICS ◽  
1983 ◽  
Vol 71 (5) ◽  
pp. 743-747
Author(s):  
Raymond K. Mulhern ◽  
Mary E. Lauer ◽  
Raymond G. Hoffmann

Twenty-four families who had participated in a Home Care Program for children terminally ill with cancer and 13 families of similar children who had died in the hospital completed inventories on parent and sibling personality as well as family functioning three to 29 months after the child's death. Parents of patients who received terminal care in the hospital were more anxious, depressed, and defensive and had greater tendencies toward somatic and interpersonal problems than parents of patients in the Home Care Program. Siblings of patients who received terminal care in the hospital were more emotionally inhibited, withdrawn, and fearful than their counterparts in the Home Care Program. Although some group differences in parental personality may have antedated terminal care, these results confirm parental reports of more adequate family adjustment following participation in a structured Home Care Program.


2020 ◽  
pp. 44-49
Author(s):  
A. A. Eryomenko ◽  
N. V. Rostunova ◽  
S. A. Budagyan ◽  
L. S. Sorokina

The article describes the experience of clinical testing of the personal telemedicine system (PTS) ‘Obereg’ for remote monitoring of patients with the consequences of severe conditions in leading Russian clinics. It is shown that such patients are at high risk of complications when transferred from the ICU to a normal ward with limited medical supervision and lack of instrumentation. The use of remote monitoring using the personal telemedicine system ‘Obereg’ allows to solve this problem. The results of the use of PTS ‘Obereg’ for the organization of monitoring in the home patronage of patients with limited mobility are presented. It is indicated that such devices should be used in an emergency situation similar to a coronavirus pandemic to monitor patients who are in infectious boxes and on home treatment.


2013 ◽  
Author(s):  
Els Rutten ◽  
Dashty Husein ◽  
Pascale Abrams ◽  
Linsey Winne ◽  
Els Feyen ◽  
...  

2014 ◽  
Vol 2014 ◽  
pp. 1-7 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. Girela ◽  
A. López ◽  
L. Ortega ◽  
J. De-Juan ◽  
F. Ruiz ◽  
...  

We have studied the use of coercive medical measures (forced medication, isolation, and mechanical restraint) in mentally ill inmates within two secure psychiatric hospitals (SPH) and three regular prisons (RP) in Spain. Variables related to adopted coercive measures were analyzed, such as type of measure, causes of indication, opinion of patient inmate, opinion of medical staff, and more frequent morbidity. A total of 209 patients (108 from SPH and 101 from RP) were studied. Isolation (41.35%) was the most frequent coercive measure, followed by mechanical restraint (33.17%) and forced medication (25.48%). The type of center has some influence; specifically in RP there is less risk of isolation and restraint than in SPH. Not having had any previous imprisonment reduces isolation and restraint risk while increases the risk of forced medication, as well as previous admissions to psychiatric inpatient units does. Finally, the fact of having lived with a partner before imprisonment reduces the risk of forced medication and communication with the family decreases the risk of isolation. Patients subjected to a coercive measure exhibited a pronounced psychopathology and most of them had been subjected to such measures on previous occasions. The mere fact of external assessment of compliance with human rights slows down the incidence of coercive measures.


1951 ◽  
Vol 51 (4) ◽  
pp. 233 ◽  
Author(s):  
John D. Thompson

Author(s):  
Lynda S. Robson ◽  
Charlene Bain ◽  
Shann Beck ◽  
Suzanne Guthrie ◽  
Peter C. Coyte ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT:Background:Intravenous methylprednisolone (IVMP) is the treatment of choice for multiple sclerosis (MS) patients undergoing acute exacerbation of disease symptoms and yet its cost has not been accurately determined. Determination of this cost in different settings is also pertinent to consideration of cost-saving alternatives to in-patient treatment.Methods:Cost analysis from the point of view of the health care system of IVMP treatment of MS patients receiving treatment in association with a selected Toronto teaching hospital in fiscal year 1994/95 was carried out. Costs of any concurrent treatments were excluded.Results:Total cost for 92 patients, based on a 4 dose regime, was estimated to be $78,527. The the cost per patient was $1,1181.84 for in-patients (IP), $714.64 for out-patients of the MS Clinic (OP) and $774.21 for patients whose treatment was initiated in the Clinic, but completed in the home (HC). Sensitivity analyses indicated: 1) IP treatment was in all cases more expensive than that of OP or HC; 2) the cost savings of OP vs. HC was sensitive to assumptions made regarding Clinic overhead, Clinic nursing costs and Home Care Program overhead.Conclusion:Alternatives to in-patient care must be considered carefully. In this study, both out-patient and in-home treatment were cost-saving alternatives to in-patient treatment, but large differences in the cost of hospital out-patient vs. in-home care could not be demonstrated.


1993 ◽  
Vol &NA; (918) ◽  
pp. 6
Author(s):  
&NA;
Keyword(s):  

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