TRENDS IN STATE AND COUNTY MENTAL-HOSPITALS IN THE US FROM 1970 TO 1992

Citation
Mj. Witkin et al., TRENDS IN STATE AND COUNTY MENTAL-HOSPITALS IN THE US FROM 1970 TO 1992, Psychiatric services, 47(10), 1996, pp. 1079-1081
Citations number
9
Categorie Soggetti
Psychiatry,"Public, Environmental & Occupation Heath",Psychiatry,"Public, Environmental & Occupation Heath
Journal title
ISSN journal
10752730
Volume
47
Issue
10
Year of publication
1996
Pages
1079 - 1081
Database
ISI
SICI code
1075-2730(1996)47:10<1079:TISACM>2.0.ZU;2-O
Abstract
Objective: The authors document changes in state mental hospitals from 1970 to 1992 in four areas: the number of hospitals, the average dail y census, expenditures, and number of full-time-equivalent staff. Meth ods: Data examined were derived from information collected in the Inve ntory of Mental Health Organizations and General Hospital Mental Healt h Services. Results: From 1970 to 1992, the number of state hospitals dropped from 310 to 273, and their inpatient populations were drastica lly reduced (a 77 percent decrease), a continuation of a trend that be gan in 1956, Most of the reduction was due to the down-sizing of exist ing hospitals rather than to hospital closings. A complex combination of medical, social, economic, legal and political factors were respons ible for the decrease. Although expenditures for state hospitals were nearly $8 billion in 1992, a 339 percent increase over 1970, the level of expenditures in current dollars has leveled off in recent years, a nd expenditures measured in constant dollars (adjusted for inflation) have actually decreased since the early 1980s, The number of professio nal patient care staff increased by about half, while nonprofessional staff decreased by about the same proportion, Conclusions: In the near future, it appears that state hospitals sill continue to reduce their patient populations, although at a slower rate than in the past, and will continue to care for large numbers of persons who either are invo luntarily admitted or do not have alternative living arrangements. How ever, state hospitals are likely to decrease in importance.