Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Patient-Initiated Brief Admission (PIBA) is an intervention designed to provide constructive crisis management for patients. The purpose of this study was to evaluate outcomes in healthcare utilisation and self-inflicted injuries at one Swedish Hospital where PIBA was implemented in late 2017. METHODS: Patients who signed a PIBA-contract between 2017 and 2023 were included in the study. Data on inpatient care, contacts with the psychiatric emergency department and self-inflicted injuries that resulted in contact with medical care were collected from patients' medical records. Effects of PIBA were assessed using paired t-tests, comparing pre-post changes 0.5, 1 and 2 years, from initiation of PIBA-contract, respectively. RESULTS: Data from a total of 38 patients were analysed. There was a marked decrease in inpatient care from voluntary admissions in the first six months after initiation of PIBA. There was also a significant decrease in number of contacts with the psychiatric emergency department (for all patients) in the 1-year pre-post comparison, but not for the 0.5- and 2-year pre-post comparisons. There were no significant reductions in compulsory inpatient care or self-inflicted injuries in our cohort. Patients with contracts extending over several years appeared stable, on average, in their use of care and prevalence of intoxications. CONCLUSION: The main effect on inpatient care after initiation of PIBA was a reduction in voluntary admissions, coinciding with a shift from voluntary admissions in favour of PIBA. The results support a more widespread utilisation of PIBA from a health-economic perspective.