Factors Associated With Psychiatry Consultation for Musculoskeletal Trauma Patients

In an online, survey-based experiment, musculoskeletal surgeon members of the science of variation group (n = 243) and a group of consult-liaison psychiatrists (n = 18) read 5 hypothetical scenarios of patients recovering from musculoskeletal trauma, each containing 5 randomized patient variables, a...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sean T. Campbell MD, Joost T.P. Kortlever MD, Amanda M. Franciscus MD, Divy Ravindranath MD, David Ring MD, PhD, Julius A. Bishop MD
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2024-11-01
Series:Journal of Patient Experience
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/23743735241299912
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:In an online, survey-based experiment, musculoskeletal surgeon members of the science of variation group (n = 243) and a group of consult-liaison psychiatrists (n = 18) read 5 hypothetical scenarios of patients recovering from musculoskeletal trauma, each containing 5 randomized patient variables, and indicated their recommendation for psychiatry consultation or not. Factors associated with recommendation for psychiatry consultation included younger age, history of a psychiatric disorder, and pre-injury use of antipsychotic medications, and scenarios involving psychosis, suicidality, hallucinations in the setting of substance withdrawal, and questionable capacity for informed consent, but not with sadness alone. Musculoskeletal surgeons can collaborate with psychiatrists to develop comprehensive care for inpatients with musculoskeletal trauma starting with relatively pressing mental health needs and perhaps expanding into treatment of sadness or worry that can manifest as greater symptom intensity and a delayed recovery trajectory.
ISSN:2374-3743