Abstract

With brief psychiatric hospitalizations, the extent to which symptoms change is rarely characterized. We sought to understand symptomatic changes across Research Domain Criteria (RDoC) dimensions, and the extent to which such improvement might be associated with risk for readmission. We identified 3,634 individuals with 4,713 hospital admissions to the psychiatric inpatient unit of a large academic medical center between 2010 and 2015. We applied a natural language processing tool to extract estimates of the five RDoC domains to the admission note and discharge summary and calculated the change in each domain. We examined the extent to which symptom domains changed during admission, and their relationship to baseline clinical and sociodemographic features, using linear regression. Symptomatic worsening was rare in the negative valence (0.4%) and positive valence (5.1%) domains, but more common in cognition (25.8%). Most diagnoses exhibited improvement in negative valence, which was associated with significant reduction in readmission risk. Despite generally brief hospital stays, we detected reduction across multiple symptom domains, with greatest improvement in negative symptoms, and greatest probability of worsening in cognitive symptoms. This approach should facilitate investigations of other features or interventions which may influence pace of clinical improvement.

Highlights

  • In an era of brief psychiatric hospitalizations, the extent to which individuals achieve symptomatic improvement is not well characterized

  • The within diagnosis average of individual estimated RDoC (eRDoC) difference scores for each domain are illustrated in Fig 1

  • In this study of transdiagnostic symptom change during inpatient admission, we identified distinct patterns of association with individual estimated Research Domain Criteria (RDoC) domains

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Summary

Introduction

In an era of brief psychiatric hospitalizations, the extent to which individuals achieve symptomatic improvement is not well characterized. On one Italian inpatient unit with an average length of stay of 5.7 days, for example, only 13.6% of individuals achieved ’clinically meaningful change’ [1]. The modest improvement is not wholly attributable to shorter lengths of stays, as older studies indicated substantial variability in degree of improvement [2]. The aim of hospitalization is not recovery, but sufficient stabilization for safe management at a lower level of care. Such stabilization often entails decrease in a single acute symptom that precipitated hospitalization, such as suicidality or aggressive behavior, rather than.

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