Originally published by: MedCity News on April 19, 2024
Hospital emergency departments (EDs) have become the frontline of the mental health crisis. Yet they often do not have the capacity to provide effective levels of care due to the increased volume and acuity of behavioral health cases, compounded by limited resources and a lack of community-based behavioral health treatment options.
Overburdened EDs create longer wait times, increase the likelihood of medical errors, drive up costs, increase provider stress, and generally lead to poorer patient health outcomes.
To reduce the pressure on health systems, healthcare providers across the continuum of care need to collaborate on patient-centered, nuanced, and holistic behavioral healthcare solutions that transcend traditional ED care.
One in three Americans have substance use disorder or mental health illness, and 17.3 million U.S. adults experience major depressive disorder. Children’s hospitals saw a 20% increase in trips to the ED for mental health cases from 2019 to 2022, with suicide and self-injury ED cases rising 50%.
When adults and children experiencing mental health issues turn to the ED instead of community resources, it overwhelms health systems. More than 50% of the EDs and hospitals lack psychiatric services. Further, EDs are not designed to provide a safe, therapeutic environment for individuals with acute mental health challenges, particularly those experiencing suicidal ideation, severe depression, or psychosis.
High-stress environments can exacerbate mental health conditions. Ill-equipped emergency care staff may resort to sedation, delaying adequate psychiatry assessments; or they may err on the side of caution and admit patients, preventing bed turnover. This can impact outcomes and readmission rates. One in five mental health patients in the ED comes back within six months.
Fortunately, there are novel care approaches health systems and healthcare professionals can flex and scale as demand for behavioral health ebbs and flows
EDs in need of a pressure valve can turn to emerging options along the care continuum. Some exist within the health system and some circumvent the ED altogether, providing specialized care to behavioral health patients in alternate care settings.
Telepsychiatry services
Emergency psychiatric assessment, treatment, and healing units (EmPATHs)
Crisis stabilization units (CSUs)
Intensive outpatient programs (IOPs)
Across these novel approaches, telehealth services can span gaps and ensure access to highly qualified clinicians while helping bolster ED staff and resources. In some cases, a telehealth clinician can better follow and sustain a patient’s treatment path from inpatient to outpatient settings, building rapport and providing consistency that contributes to better outcomes.
Another bridging option between intensive inpatient and outpatient care is partial hospitalization: a patient can attend counseling and treatment sessions during the day, and return home to their families and communities at night.
Success in solving the ED mental health crisis means promptly rightsizing treatment based on patient risk through accurate, comprehensive psychiatric assessments and stabilizing treatments. Telehealth, combined with innovative mental health facilities, can help cover the scope of mental health concerns and the range of optimal treatment paths – ultimately building stronger connections across the continuum of care and achieving better patient outcomes.
