Emergency department utilization, inpatient admissions, and inpatient costs among adolescent deliberate self-harm patients: A five-year follow-up study

Goldman-Mellor S, Phillips D, Brown P, Gruenewald P, a MC, Wiebe D. Emergency department utilization, inpatient admissions, and inpatient costs among adolescent deliberate self-harm patients: A five-year follow-up study. Psychiatric Services. 2019;71(2):136–143.

Abstract

Objective. Adolescent self-harm rates have risen substantially in the U.S., yet health and social outcomes among contemporary self-harming youths are infrequently tracked and remain poorly understood. This study investigated long-term health service utilization (emergency department [ED] visits and inpatient admissions) and inpatient costs among a recent cohort of adolescent deliberate self-harm patients. Methods. This retrospective cohort study used statewide, all-payer, longitudinally-linked patient discharge data from California, USA. All CA residents aged 10-19 years presenting to EDs in 2010 with deliberate self-harm (n=5,396) were compared with two control groups: A random sample of adolescent patients with other complaints, matched on sex, age, residential ZIP code, and month of index visit (general control patients; n=14,921), and matched patients with psychiatric complaints but no self-harm (psychiatric controls; n=15,835). Study outcomes included five-year rates of subsequent ED visits, inpatient admissions, and inpatient costs, both overall and for psychiatric and non-psychiatric complaints separately. Results. Self-harm patients rates of ED utilization, inpatient admissions, and inpatient costs were significantly higher than those of general control patients (by 39%, 81%, and 21%, respectively), controlling for confounding demographic and utilization characteristics. Associations mostly persisted, though smaller in magnitude, in comparisons with psychiatric control patients. Both psychiatric and non-psychiatric complaints contributed to self-harming adolescents excess health service utilization and costs. Conclusion. Adolescent deliberate self-harm is associated with long-lasting and costly patterns of health service utilization, often but not exclusively for psychiatric complaints. Future research should investigate the pathways underlying these associations, and incorporate service utilization as a key patient outcome.
Last updated on 08/30/2022