Abstract
The aim was to explore what happened during a five-year period to a group of patients with no previous psychiatric admissions, who were detained for the first time in a psychiatric hospital under part II of the Mental Health Act 1983. Subjects (n=189) who were detained under Section 2 or 3 in 1996 and 1997 in Queen Elizabeth Psychiatric Hospital, Birmingham were identified from computerised inpatient admission records. The mean age was 40.0 years (range 21-65). Nearly half of the cohort had a diagnosis of psychoses. Asians had the highest proportion of psychoses (64%) compared to African-Caribbean patients (48%) and White patients (41%). Almost half of the sample had a further admission, with Asian and African-Caribbean patients more likely to be readmitted than their white counterparts. Nearly a third of the cohort had a further compulsory detention. On re-admission, African-Caribbean subjects were more likely to be detained compared to Asian and White subjects. Fifty per cent had a further compulsory admission within a year of the index admission. The high number of psychoses in the Asian group may be due to their psychosis being more serious at presentation as a result of denial of illness and an increased co-morbidity with drug use in Asian men.
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