Abstract
BACKGROUND: Psychiatric care in Brazil is based on the National Mental Health Policy and is aligned with the guidelines of the Brazilian Unified Health System. It is based on the preeminence of care in the extra-hospital context over the hospital context. Hospital admissions should occur solely when extra-hospital resources prove insufficient for the proper management of the mental health condition. METHOD: It refers to a time series investigation of a descriptive, ecological, and observational nature. We used publicly available hospital admissions data from the Brazilian Unified Health System's Department of Informatics. The study looked at information on diseases in ICD-10 group V that affected both men and women aged 0 to 80 or older, from 2012 to 2023. The information was analyzed using the statistical software SPSS 20.0, as well as Jointpoint, through permutation tests, with the aim of evaluating the temporal trend of hospitalization and mortality rates. The joinpoint regression model used a log-linear method to set up a series of connected lines on a logarithmic scale and the Monte Carlo permutation method to figure out the direction or statistical significance. A significance level of 5% was established for the execution of all statistical tests. RESULTS: Overall, a trend of reduction in psychiatric hospitalization rates was observed. However, these trends exhibited fluctuations when analyzed in isolation with respect to the type of disorder, gender, and age group. In contrast to the general trend, the number of hospitalizations for affective disorders and disorders linked to stress and somatization went up. This was especially true between 2021 and 2023, when the number of hospitalizations for other disorders went down more significantly. The predominance of hospitalizations in the male gender was significant. However, the trends of decrease were less pronounced in the male group, especially regarding hospitalizations associated with alcohol and other substance use, which draws attention to the hospitalization rates of the female sex. As it relates to dementias, the national picture shows that hospitalizations are going down, and most of the patients are women and older adults or people who are very old. However, an analysis of the state scenario showed that hospitalizations went up for adults, more than for the elderly combined, with more men than women. CONCLUSION: the results achieved in this research confirm the findings, both nationally and internationally. Studies have shown that investments made through the National Mental Health Policy and the effects of Covid-19 led to a drop in the number of people admitted to psychiatric hospitals. This was because of the restructuring of the care model, which meant that hospitalizations had to be prioritized to meet the needs of Covid-19, which hurt people with mental disorders.