CORRECTION article

Front. Psychiatry, 02 August 2022

Sec. Public Mental Health

Volume 13 - 2022 | https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2022.957272

Corrigendum: Expert arguments for trends of psychiatric bed numbers: A systematic review of qualitative data

  • 1. Medical Faculty, Universidad Diego Portales, Santiago, Chile

  • 2. Departamento de Neurología y Psiquiatría, Clínica Alemana de Santiago, Facultad de Medicina Clínica Alemana, Universidad del Desarrollo, Santiago, Chile

  • 3. Department of Psychiatry and Mental Health, Hospital Clínico Universidad de Chile, Santiago, Chile

  • 4. Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy Campus Mitte, Charité Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Berlin, Germany

  • 5. Unit for Social and Community Psychiatry (WHO Collaborating Centre for Mental Health Service Development), Queen Mary University of London, London, United Kingdom

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In the original article, there was a mistake in Table 2 as published.

Table 2

ThemesWorld Bank Income classification
High-Income Countries (HIC)Low- and Middle-Income Countries (LMIC)
AustraliaCanadaDenmarkFinlandGreeceHong KongIrelandItalyJapanKoreaNetherlandsNZNorwayUKUSSloveniaSwedenGlobalTotal HICBrazilButhanChinaGhanaMalawiMoldovaUgandaSouth AfricaSouth AmericaTotal LMICTotal HIC and LMIC
Expert arguments to reduce psychiatric bed numbers
1.1. Cost effectiveness
1.1.1. Lower overall cost of home-based treatment compared with inpatient services111303
1.1.2. Implementation of a day hospital service and home treatment teams allows for greater concentration of inpatient resources on most severely ill patients, leading to cost savings1101
1.1.3. Reduce resources for inpatient care to develop outpatient care0111
1.2. Inappropriate use of inpatient care
1.2.1. Inappropriately long psychiatric inpatient care1131606
1.2.2. Reduced number of long-stay patients allows for further psychiatric bed removals1121505
1.2.3. Inpatient psychiatric bed capacity and availability generates utilization and coercive treatments1101
1.2.4. Economic incentives for inadequately long inpatient bed use1101
1.3. Bed reductions lead to better use and development of existing community care1101
1.4. Quality of care is maintained or improved with less beds
1.4.1. Bed reductions, while maintaining personnel, improves inpatient care conditions1101
1.4.2. Bed reductions do not affect the quality of care in the system as a whole and has not shown negative effects2202
1.5. Less psychiatric bed needs
1.5.1. Trend analyses show less psychiatric bed needs of schizophrenia patients1101
1.5.2. Decrease in first-ever admission rates of schizophrenia1101
1.5.3. Low inpatient occupancy rates1101
1.6. Inpatient services are restrictive environments2202
1.7. New care pathways and better integration of emergency departments, inpatient and outpatient services allow for further psychiatric bed removals1113114
1.8. Follow global trends of psychiatric bed reductions in most of the developed countries112113
1.9. Bed reductions reduce reliance on inpatient services1101
1.10. Hospital bed numbers should be reduced to serve the most severely ill patients1101
Total111010215102011600133100002000336
Expert arguments to increase or maintain psychiatric bed numbers
2.1. Lack of beds for financial pressure
2.1.1. Financial pressure on the mental health system has resulted in too many bed removals and underfunded inpatient care systems11202
2.1.2. Financial disincentives and unfair reimbursement practice have led to lower numbers of psychiatric beds than actually needed1101
2.2. Higher total health care system costs due to bed closures (queuing in General Hospitals)1101
2.3. High demand of psychiatric beds
2.3.1. High occupancy rates and overcrowding1111121821311
2.3.2. Increasing admission rates and waiting times112318119
2.3.3. Overcrowding and long waiting times in emergency departments315110010
2.4. Inadequately short length of stay
2.4.1. Short length of stay and premature discharge1132707
2.4.2. Revolving door effect: Early readmission rates11114115
2.5. Lack of specialized psychiatric beds for children and adolescents336117
2.6. Lack of locally available beds
2.6.1. Need for the development of integrated health care systems with decentralized inpatient care capacities01122
2.6.2. Risk of transfer outside patients' local community for care11202
2.7. Lack of beds compromises quality of care
2.7.1. Hardships for patients and families, compromised safety and occurrence of serious incidents232707
2.7.2. Severe emotional and physical harm to patients, families and communities1101
2.8. Increase in involuntary admissions due to lack of timely voluntary admission at an earlier stage of illness2202
2.9. Increasing suicide rates112404
2.10. Sub-groups of people with severe mental illnesses are still in need of psychiatric inpatient beds1131606
2.10.1. Need for the development of safe, modern and humane asylums that provide long-term residential care for people with severe mental illnesses2202
2.10.2. Lack of available inpatient beds and treatment for schizophrenia patients11202
2.11. Insufficient and ineffective community services111137229
2.11.1. Limited post-discharge support in the community4404
2.11.2. Long waiting lists for outpatient services11202
2.11.3. Implementation of community care complements, but does not replace inpatient care1113606
2.12. Lack of affordable and supported housing services
2.12.1. Discharge to homelessness and shelters1111404
2.13. Criminalization of mentally ill1112492211
2.13.1. Increasing detention rates due to lack of adequate and timely mental health treatments of persons with severe mental illnesses (and comorbid substance use disorders)122505
2.13.2. Delays in transferring individuals with mental disorders in the criminal justice system to hospitals due to inpatient bed shortage1101
Total10591022110113343411711321121012210123

Number of expert arguments per theme and country.

NZ, New Zealand; UK, United Kingdom; US, United States of America; HIC, High- and upper-middle income countries; LMIC, Low- and Middle-Income countries.

Column headings are labeled as “High- and upper-middle income countries (HIC)“ and ”Lower-Middle and Low-Income countries (LMIC)“. The heading should read ”High-Income Countries (HIC)“ and ”Low- and Middle-Income Countries (LMIC),“ respectively.

Zeros were erroneously inserted in several lines that should have been blank,

On page 12

1.1. Cost effectiveness

1.2 Inappropriate use of inpatient care

1.4. Quality of care is maintained or improved with less beds

1.5. Less psychiatric bed needs

On page 13

Expert arguments to increase or maintain psychiatric bed numbers

2.1 Lack of beds for financial pressure

2.3 High demand of psychiatric beds

2.4 Inadequately short length of stay

2.6. Lack of locally available beds

2.7 Lack of beds compromises quality of care

2.12 Lack of affordable and supported housing services

The numbers for those headings are reported in the subordinate points.

Finally, only in the PDF version of the published article, an error occurs in the heading of the first column in Table 2. The statement “Expert arguments to reduce psychiatric bed numbers,” which is correctly inserted on page 12, is erroneously repeated on pages 13 and 14. Instead, the correct column heading on pages 13 and 14 is “Expert arguments to increase or maintain psychiatric bed numbers.”

The corrected Table 2 is shown below.

The authors apologize for this error and state that this does not change the scientific conclusions of the article in any way. The original article has been updated.

Publisher's note

All claims expressed in this article are solely those of the authors and do not necessarily represent those of their affiliated organizations, or those of the publisher, the editors and the reviewers. Any product that may be evaluated in this article, or claim that may be made by its manufacturer, is not guaranteed or endorsed by the publisher.

Summary

Keywords

psychiatric hospital beds, general hospital psychiatry, institutionalization, expert recommendation, consensus, inpatient, length of stay

Citation

Mundt AP, Delhey Langerfeldt S, Rozas Serri E, Siebenförcher M and Priebe S (2022) Corrigendum: Expert arguments for trends of psychiatric bed numbers: A systematic review of qualitative data. Front. Psychiatry 13:957272. doi: 10.3389/fpsyt.2022.957272

Received

30 May 2022

Accepted

11 July 2022

Published

02 August 2022

Volume

13 - 2022

Edited and reviewed by

Anastasia Theodoridou, Psychiatric University Hospital Zurich, Switzerland

Updates

Copyright

*Correspondence: Adrian P. Mundt Mathias Siebenförcher

This article was submitted to Public Mental Health, a section of the journal Frontiers in Psychiatry

Disclaimer

All claims expressed in this article are solely those of the authors and do not necessarily represent those of their affiliated organizations, or those of the publisher, the editors and the reviewers. Any product that may be evaluated in this article or claim that may be made by its manufacturer is not guaranteed or endorsed by the publisher.

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