Abstract

Behavioural assessment units (BAU) have been established in emergency departments (EDs) to provide short-term observation, treatment, and care to people experiencing acute behavioural disturbance. A prospective observational study was conducted in a cohort of adult patients admitted to one BAU located within an ED (July-December 2017) to compare clinical characteristics, treatment outcomes, and use of restrictive interventions for those who received a specialist mental health (MH) assessment with those who did not. Of the 457 patients, 61.5% received a specialist MH assessment. This group had a lower acuity (Australasian Triage Score 10.4%; CI 0.2-2.0% vs 13.6%; CI 9.3-19.5%); more arrived with police (28.8%; CI 23.8-34.3 vs 5.1%; CI 2.7-9.4%); and were subjected to restrictive interventions while in the BAU. Security responses for unarmed threat (code grey) were higher (10.9%; CI 7.8-15.0% vs 4.4%; CI 2.3-8.5%), as was the use of chemical restraint (4.2%; CI 2.4-7.2 vs 0.0% CI 0.0 - 2.1%). Those requiring specialist MH assessment had a longer length of stay (12.7 vs 5.2hours). Further development of the BAU model of care must include targeted, evidence-based strategies to minimize the use of restrictive interventions and ensure timely access to acute mental health services.

Full Text
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