Short-term diagnostic stability among re-admitted psychiatric in-patients in Eldoret, Kenya
Document Type
Article
Department
Faculty of Health Sciences, East Africa
Abstract
Objective: To determine the prospective and retrospective consistency of diagnoses among readmitted psychiatric in-patients at the Moi Teaching and Referral Hospital in Eldoret, Kenya.
Method: Admission and discharge diagnoses among a consecutive sample of 114 psychiatric in-patients readmitted at the Moi Teaching and Referral Hospital between August and December 2009 were compared.
Results: The commonest diagnoses at admission were schizophrenia spectrum disorders (47.4%) and bipolar spectrum disorders (30.7%).Overall diagnostic stability as measured by prospective consistency in this study was 72.8%.The most stable diagnostic category was Major Depressive Disorder (100% prospective and retrospective consistency), followed by Bipolar Disorders (91.4% prospective consistency, 69.6% retrospective consistency) and Substance-related disorders (87.5% prospective consistency, 50% retrospective consistency). Schizophrenia-spectrum disorders had a prospective consistency of 75.9% and a retrospective consistency of 87.2%. ‘Other Psychotic Disorders’ (acute psychotic episode and psychotic disorder not otherwise specified) had the lowest diagnostic stability, with both prospective and retrospective consistency being 0%.
Conclusion: Mood disorders and substance-related disorders have the highest diagnostic stability among readmitted psychiatric inpatients in a low-income country
Publication (Name of Journal)
African journal of psychiatry
Recommended Citation
Atwoli, L.,
Ndambuki, D.,
OWITI, P.,
Manguro, G.,
Omulimi, N.
(2012). Short-term diagnostic stability among re-admitted psychiatric in-patients in Eldoret, Kenya. African journal of psychiatry, 15(2), 114-118.
Available at:
https://ecommons.aku.edu/eastafrica_fhs_mc_intern_med/172
Comments
This work was published before the author joined Aga Khan University