RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Differential Use of Admission Status in a Psychiatric Emergency Room JF Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law Online JO J Am Acad Psychiatry Law FD American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law SP 595 OP 606 VO 23 IS 4 A1 Rabinowitz, Jonathan A1 Slyuzberg, Michael A1 Salamon, Itamar A1 Dupler, Sharron E. YR 1995 UL http://jaapl.org/content/23/4/595.abstract AB The goal of this study is to understand how different admission statuses of varying degrees of restrictiveness (informal, voluntary, emergency admission, and involuntary admission on medical certification) are used in the psychiatric emergency room. The study included 656 consecutively admitted patients from a psychiatric emergency room over 28 months. Data were analyzed univariately and using two discriminant function models. Only six (0.9%) patients were informal admissions. Voluntary admissions (24.9%, n = 163) tended to be for patients with affective disorders, those who were self-referred, suicidal risks, those who had a marital or family problem, and those who were over age 60. Nonvoluntary admissions (74.2%) tended to be for patients with schizophreniform symptoms and those referred by police or court. Involuntary admission on medical certification (53.2%, n = 349) tended to be for patients who were family referred, younger than 20 years old, had social interpersonal nonfamily stressors, were suicidal risks, were or had been married, had organic psychotic disorder, history of violence, and manic episode or schizophrenia. Emergency admission patients (21%, n = 138) were characterized by being between 40 to 50 years old, having a diagnosis of psychoactive substance abuse, having previous outpatient treatment, and having been referred by emergency service. The major difference between involuntary admissions and voluntary was that the former were more often actively psychotic or referred by police or court. The major difference between emergency admission and involuntary admission on medical certification seemed to be that patients with a more available support system, whose primary diagnoses was not substance abuse and who were suicidal, were preferred for involuntary admission on medical certification.