Long-term trends in co-occurring medical and psychiatric hospitalizations among children and adolescents in Ontario, Canada.

Main Article Content

Natasha Saunders
Astrid Guttmann
Maria Chiu
Sima Gandhi
Simone Vigod
Paul Kurdyak
Kinwah Fung
Isobel Sharpe
Scott Emerson
Alene Toulany

Abstract

Background
Psychiatric conditions are common amongst hospitalized children. Co-occurring psychiatric conditions for medical hospitalizations contribute to length of stay, costs, and readmissions. We sought to measure trends over 20 years in pediatric hospitalizations for co-occurring medical and psychiatric conditions and compare with those without psychiatric comorbidity, overall and in free-standing children’s hospitals. 


Methods
We identified all 3- to 17-year-olds hospitalized in Ontario, Canada between April 1, 2003 and March 31, 2022. Using health record discharge diagnoses, hospitalizations were assigned to 1 of 4 groups: 1) medical-diagnosis-only, 2) psychiatric-diagnosis-only, 3) primary medical diagnosis with psychiatric comorbidity, and 4) primary psychiatric diagnosis with medical comorbidity. Hospitalization trends for 1) all hospitals, and 2) free-standing children’s hospitals were described and compared.


Results
From 2003 to 2022, medical-diagnosis-only hospitalizations declined 39% (41,909 to 25,486 hospitalizations), psychiatric-diagnosis-only hospitalizations increased 96% (3227 to 6337), medical hospitalizations with psychiatric comorbidity increased 127% (977 to 2221) and psychiatric hospitalizations with medical comorbidity increased 100% (2051 to 4096). Among pediatric hospitals, medical-diagnosis-only hospitalizations increased 23% (12,430 to 15,318), psychiatric-diagnosis-only hospitalizations increased 420% (271 to 1408), psychiatric hospitalizations with medical comorbidity increased 172% (539 to 1468) and medical hospitalizations with psychiatric comorbidity increased 235% (478 to 1599).


Conclusions
Hospitals have experienced large absolute and relative increases in volumes for psychiatric conditions both with and without co-occurring medical conditions, particularly among free-standing children’s hospitals. Healthcare provider training, hospital resourcing, and health system planning must consider how best to accommodate the increasing acute psychiatric care needs of hospitalized children and adolescents.

Article Details

How to Cite
Saunders, N., Guttmann, A., Chiu, M., Gandhi, S., Vigod, S., Kurdyak, P., Fung, K., Sharpe, I., Emerson, S. and Toulany, A. (2024) “ Canada”., International Journal of Population Data Science, 9(5). doi: 10.23889/ijpds.v9i5.2525.

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