Content area

Abstract

Background: As part of an effort to improve police interactions with mentally ill citizens, and improve mental health care delivery to subjects in acute distress, the University of Louisville, in conjunction with the Louisville Metro Police, established the crisis intervention team (CIT). CIT is composed of uniformed officers who receive extensive training in crisis intervention and psychiatric issues and who are preferentially called to investigate police calls that may involve a mentally ill individual. Methods: In an effort to determine the characteristics of the individuals brought to the emergency psychiatric service (EPS) by CIT officers, a comparative (CIT vs. mental inquest warrant [MIW, a citizen-initiated court order to bring someone for psychiatric evaluation because of concerns regarding dangerousness] vs non-CIT/non-MIW), descriptive evaluation was performed. Results: With the exception of a higher rate of schizophrenic subjects brought in by CIT (43.0% vs. 22.1, non-CIT, P=.002), the demographics, diagnosis, and disposition of CIT-referred subjects were not different in any way from non-CIT patients. Subjects referred on MIWs were more likely to be admitted to a psychiatric hospital than non-MIW patients (71.6 vs. 34.8, P <.0001), but CIT-referred hospitalization rates were not different from hospitalization rates of self-referred subjects (20.7 vs. 33.3, ns). Conclusions: CIT officers appear to do a good job at identifying patients in need of psychiatric care. [PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]

Details

Title
Psychiatric Disposition of Patients Brought in by Crisis Intervention Team Police Officers
Author
Strauss, Gordon; Glenn, Mark; Reddi, Padma; Afaq, Irfan; Podolskaya, Anna; Rybakova, Tatyana; Osman Saeed; Shah, Vital; Singh, Baljit; Skinner, Andrew; El-Mallakh, Rif S
Pages
223-8
Publication year
2005
Publication date
Apr 2005
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
ISSN
00103853
e-ISSN
15732789
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
228311052
Copyright
Springer 2005