CMHS data highlights on: availability of psychiatric beds, United States: selected years, 1970-1990.

Autor: Redick RW, Witkin MJ, Atay JE, Manderscheid RW
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: Mental health statistical note [Ment Health Stat Note] 1994 Aug (213), pp. 1-7.
Abstrakt: Despite the decrease from 474,190 to 250,541 between 1970 and 1990 in the overall number of non-Federal psychiatric beds (excluding "scatter" beds in non-Federal general hospitals), the trend was by no means constant over time. Between 1970 and 1982, a period of rapid deinstitutionalization of State mental hospitals, the number of beds in all organizations combined dropped precipitously from 474,190 to 222,666, led by State mental hospitals which decreased from 413,066 to 140,140 beds. This was the height of the community mental health center movement and the prevailing view of mental health administrators was that persons with mental illness could be cared for better in the community, rather than at State mental hospitals, far from their homes. Thus, some hospitals closed altogether, and many others closed wards and units as part of the downsizing process. Contrary to a decrease in the number of beds in State mental hospitals during the 1970-82 period, the number of beds in other organization types, in particular private psychiatric hospitals and separate psychiatric services of non-Federal general hospitals, remained relatively constant. The net result was a substantial decrease in the overall number of non-Federal psychiatric beds. In the 1982-90 period, a different phenomenon occurred. The number of beds in State mental hospitals was continuing to decline, but at a slower rate from 140,140 to 98,789, while the number of beds in other types of mental health organizations, particularly private psychiatric hospitals and separate psychiatric inpatient services of non-Federal general hospitals, expanded somewhat.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Databáze: MEDLINE