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Factors Related to Psychiatric Hospital Readmission for Survivors of Human Trafficking

Factors Related to Psychiatric Hospital Readmission for Survivors of Human Trafficking Human trafficking is a public health concern that has gained attention over the last 25 years. The literature has shown that survivors of trafficking tend to have higher mental health needs due to the complex trauma experienced both related to trafficking and experiences unrelated to trafficking. This study aimed to explore factors related to hospital readmission among patients with lived experiences of human trafficking in an inpatient psychiatric unit. A retrospective chart review was conducted (n = 192, age 18–69) to examine associations between readmission and demographics, trafficking typology, legal status of admission, presenting problem, primary psychiatric diagnosis, substance use diagnosis (SUD), housing status, and length of stay. Chi-square and regression analyses indicated that gender (p = .009), SUD (p = .034), and housing at discharge (p = .036) were significantly related to readmission. Specifically, men, patients with SUD, and those discharged into temporary housing were more likely to be readmitted. These findings highlight the importance of supporting this patient population at discharge. This information can be used to encourage system-wide education and policy improvements, bolster intervention efforts to promote protective factors at discharge, and support the creation of inclusive community resources for all survivors. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Journal of Human Trafficking Taylor & Francis

Factors Related to Psychiatric Hospital Readmission for Survivors of Human Trafficking

Journal of Human Trafficking , Volume OnlineFirst: 12 – Nov 4, 2022

Factors Related to Psychiatric Hospital Readmission for Survivors of Human Trafficking

Journal of Human Trafficking , Volume OnlineFirst: 12 – Nov 4, 2022

Abstract

Human trafficking is a public health concern that has gained attention over the last 25 years. The literature has shown that survivors of trafficking tend to have higher mental health needs due to the complex trauma experienced both related to trafficking and experiences unrelated to trafficking. This study aimed to explore factors related to hospital readmission among patients with lived experiences of human trafficking in an inpatient psychiatric unit. A retrospective chart review was conducted (n = 192, age 18–69) to examine associations between readmission and demographics, trafficking typology, legal status of admission, presenting problem, primary psychiatric diagnosis, substance use diagnosis (SUD), housing status, and length of stay. Chi-square and regression analyses indicated that gender (p = .009), SUD (p = .034), and housing at discharge (p = .036) were significantly related to readmission. Specifically, men, patients with SUD, and those discharged into temporary housing were more likely to be readmitted. These findings highlight the importance of supporting this patient population at discharge. This information can be used to encourage system-wide education and policy improvements, bolster intervention efforts to promote protective factors at discharge, and support the creation of inclusive community resources for all survivors.

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References (16)

Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Copyright
© 2022 Taylor & Francis
ISSN
2332-2713
eISSN
2332-2705
DOI
10.1080/23322705.2022.2139490
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

Human trafficking is a public health concern that has gained attention over the last 25 years. The literature has shown that survivors of trafficking tend to have higher mental health needs due to the complex trauma experienced both related to trafficking and experiences unrelated to trafficking. This study aimed to explore factors related to hospital readmission among patients with lived experiences of human trafficking in an inpatient psychiatric unit. A retrospective chart review was conducted (n = 192, age 18–69) to examine associations between readmission and demographics, trafficking typology, legal status of admission, presenting problem, primary psychiatric diagnosis, substance use diagnosis (SUD), housing status, and length of stay. Chi-square and regression analyses indicated that gender (p = .009), SUD (p = .034), and housing at discharge (p = .036) were significantly related to readmission. Specifically, men, patients with SUD, and those discharged into temporary housing were more likely to be readmitted. These findings highlight the importance of supporting this patient population at discharge. This information can be used to encourage system-wide education and policy improvements, bolster intervention efforts to promote protective factors at discharge, and support the creation of inclusive community resources for all survivors.

Journal

Journal of Human TraffickingTaylor & Francis

Published: Nov 4, 2022

Keywords: Human trafficking; psychiatric hospital; psychiatric readmission; mental health; inpatient

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