Leczenie w psychiatrycznych oddziałach dziennych w porównaniu z oddziałami całodobowymi w róznych europejskich systemach opieki zdrowotnej--załozenia programu EDEN
[Treatment in psychiatric day hospital in comparison with inpatient wards in different European health care systems--objectives of EDEN project]
Language Polish Country Poland Media print
Document type Clinical Trial, Journal Article, Randomized Controlled Trial, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
PubMed
12647460
Knihovny.cz E-resources
- MeSH
- Time Factors MeSH
- Day Care, Medical economics statistics & numerical data MeSH
- Mental Disorders economics therapy MeSH
- Inpatients * MeSH
- Humans MeSH
- Multicenter Studies as Topic MeSH
- Delivery of Health Care methods standards MeSH
- Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic standards MeSH
- Hospitals, Psychiatric economics statistics & numerical data MeSH
- Outcome and Process Assessment, Health Care MeSH
- Check Tag
- Humans MeSH
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH
- Clinical Trial MeSH
- Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't MeSH
- Randomized Controlled Trial MeSH
- Geographicals
- Czech Republic MeSH
- London MeSH
- Germany MeSH
- Poland MeSH
- Slovakia MeSH
The paper presents the objectives and design of an ongoing multicenter randomized, controlled trial EDEN (European Day Hospital EvaluatioN). The EDEN-study aims to evaluate the efficacy of acute psychiatric treatment in a day hospital setting in five European centres: Dresden, London, Michalovce, Prague and Wroclaw. The main hypothesis is that day hospital treatment for acute psychiatric patients is as effective as conventional inpatient hospital care. The objectives of the study are to evaluate the viability and effectiveness of day hospitals for acute psychiatric treatment, to identify subgroups of patients with a more or less favourable outcome so that the treatment setting might be specifically applied and to ascertain the cost-effectiveness of day hospital treatment compared to conventional inpatient treatment. The study utilises a Randomised Controlled Trial (RCT) design with repeated measures at a maximum of six time points: at admission (t1), one week after admission (t2), four weeks after admission (t3), discharge (t4), three months after discharge (t5), and 12 months after discharge (t6). A combination of well-established standardised assessment instruments and open questions is used in 6 time periods. If the findings accept the main hypothesis of the study, some practical consequences could be inevitable: at a mental health policy level, these results could lead to an increase in the capacity of day hospitals; at the clinical level clinicians could redefine their concepts of care to consider the day hospital as an alternative to conventional inpatient treatment; from economic point of view could lead to reduction of treatment costs.