The British Journal of Psychiatry (2006) 188: 581-582. doi: 10.1192/bjp.bp.104.007476
© 2006 The Royal College of Psychiatrists
Socio-economic deprivation and duration of hospital stay in severe mental disorder
MELANIE AMNA ABAS, MD
Division of Psychiatry, University of Auckland, New Zealand, and Health
Services Research Department and Institute of Psychiatry, London, UK
JANE VANDERPYL, PhD
Mental Health Services, Counties Manukau District Health Board,
Auckland
ELIZABETH ROBINSON, MSc
Department of Community Health, University of Auckland
TRIX LE PROU, MHSc
Mental Health Services, Counties Manukau District Health Board,
Auckland
PETER CRAMPTON, PhD
Department of Public Health, Wellington School of Medicine and Health
Sciences, Wellington, New Zealand
Correspondence:
Dr Melanie A. Abas, Section of Epidemiology, Institute of Psychiatry, London
SE5 8AF, UK. E-mail:
Melanie.abas{at}dsl.pipex.com
Declaration of interest None.
Funding detailed in Acknowledgements.

ABSTRACT
Adults from South Auckland, New Zealand who required acute admission
to
hospital were followed from admission to discharge. After
adjusting for
demographic factors, diagnosis, chronicity, severity,
consultant psychiatrist
and involuntary admission, the length
of stay for those from more deprived
areas was significantly
longer by 7 days than for those from less deprived
areas. Information
on socio-economic deprivation should be used in discharge
planning
and in optimising access to community care. Research is needed
on
group-level factors that may affect recovery from mental
disorders.

INTRODUCTION
Socio-economic deprivation, which measures the disadvantage
of an
individual or group relative to the local community or
wider society
(
Townsend, 1987), is an
indicator of socio-economic
position. Three studies have shown an association
between area
deprivation and length of psychiatric admission
(
Hirsch, 1988;
Thornicroft et al,
1993;
Glover et al,
1998), but did not
control for potentially important confounders.
In this study
we used the level of deprivation of area of residence as an
indicator of individual socio-economic position
(
Salmond & Crampton,
2001).

METHOD
Counties Manukau Mental Health Services cover the mostly urban
South
Auckland district which has 378 000 residents. South
Auckland has a high
proportion of Maori (18%) and Pacific Islanders
(17%) and is deprived relative
to most of New Zealand. The
study site was the 45-bedded psychiatric
in-patient unit, which
is managed by three consultants. Community care is
provided
by five teams, with no day hospital. The cohort comprised consecutive
admissions from within the district from 1 November 1999 to
31 July 2000. We
excluded patients from outside the area, patients
readmitted during the study
period and homeless people who
had no address to code for area
deprivation.
Deprivation was measured using the NZDep96 deprivation index, which was
created from 1996 census data (Salmond
et al, 1998) available for all small areas in New
Zealand. A small area is defined as one meshblock (the smallest geographical
area for statistical purposes (median population about 90 persons)) or two
mesh-blocks. The NZDep96 index is a weighted combination of the proportions,
in a small area, of nine variables, such as being on a means-tested benefit or
lacking a specified resource (e.g. qualifications or a household telephone).
The index is split into a quintile scale where 1 represents the least deprived
20% of small areas and 5 the most deprived 20%.
An independent firm assigned a geographical small area code to each
patients address at the time of admission, which enabled the correct
area deprivation score to be derived. We defined the most deprived as those
living in one of the areas ranked as the most deprived 20% (in accordance with
the New Zealand definition of poor populations), the least
deprived as those living in areas ranked among the least deprived 60% and the
moderately deprived as those living in areas ranked among the intermediate
20%.
The length of hospital stay was the number of days for the index admission
in the study period. Potential confounding variables at individual patient
level were obtained from case notes and from interviews with the
patients primary nurse, using structured questionnaires, such as the
10-item form of the Health of the Nation Outcome Scales
(Amin et al, 1999),
the Global Assessment of Functioning
(American Psychiatric Association,
1994) and the Reasons for Admission schedule
(Flannigan et al,
1994). We used the DSMIV principal diagnosis and any
comorbid diagnosis stated in the discharge summary.
We analysed the data using STATA version 6 using the log of the length of
stay and the geometric mean, because of the log-normal distribution of length
of stay. We used generalised linear modelling for the effect of deprivation,
in three categories, using a multiplicative model.

RESULTS
Of the 379 index admissions in the study period, 7 patients
were homeless
and 50 were from outside the catchment area.
For 291 of the remaining 322
patients (90%), enough information
was available to enable coding at small
area level. There were
166 males (57%) and the mean age of the sample was 36
years.
Ninety-nine patients (34%) identified themselves as Maori, 116
as
European (40%), 32 as Pacific Islander (11%) and 44 as Asian
or other (15%).
Three-quarters of the sample were single, widowed,
divorced or separated and
43% lived in areas defined as most
deprived, compared with 20%
of the national population.
One hundred and forty-three patients (49%) had a
principal
diagnosis of schizophrenia, 108 (37%) of a mood disorder and
41
(14%) another principal diagnosis, with 140 (48%) having
a comorbid diagnosis.
The geometric mean length of hospital
stay was 16.6 days. One hundred and
ninety-eight patients (68%)
had been admitted involuntarily. The mean number
of previous
admissions to the psychiatric in-patient unit was 1.6 and the
mean
length of illness was 101 months.
For those from most deprived areas, the length of hospital stay was 21
days, compared with 12 days for those from the least deprived areas. After
full adjustment for confounding variables
(Table 1), this was 22 days for
those from the most deprived areas, compared with 15 days for those from the
least deprived areas. Those from moderately deprived areas also had a longer
length of stay than those from the least deprived areas.
View this table:
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Table 1 Multiple regression showing the effect of deprivation on the length of
hospital stay for index admissions (n=291)
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Principal diagnosis was the main contributor to variance (13%), followed by
psychiatric symptom severity/function/chronicity (8%), small area deprivation
(6%) and the identity of the consultant psychiatrist (3%).
Individual measures of socio-economic position (individual unemployment,
occupational class, housing tenure, being on a benefit) each added only
12% to the explanatory power of a model for length of hospital stay
containing demographic, clinical and service factors.

DISCUSSION
Lower socio-economic position, as measured by deprivation of
small area of
residence, was independently associated with
increased length of hospital
stay. Although principal diagnosis
explained more of the variance, the
association between deprivation
and length of hospital stay remained after
accounting for demographic
and clinical factors and differences between
clinicians. This
is consistent with ecological studies
(
Hirsch, 1988;
Glover et al, 1998)
and with a study which stratified according to diagnosis
(
Thornicroft et al,
1993).
Our findings may be at variance with a study that found no
association
(
Weinberg et al,
1998) because we used a measure of deprivation
(the NZDep96) that
is less prone to measurement error, being
applied at a spatial level of 90
persons (
Salmond et al,
1998;
Salmond & Crampton,
2001).
Selection bias is an unlikely explanation, as healthcare is geographically
sectorised and little private care is available. Furthermore, the association
remained after diagnosis, severity and length of illness had been controlled
for. We controlled for most potentially important confounders other than
social support. We are not able to say whether the effect of deprivation is at
the individual, household or area level. Our data suggest that place may be at
least as important as person and that moderate deprivation also has an
effect.
Conditions in deprived neighbourhoods (few employment opportunities,
restrictive work environments, social fragmentation and poor services) might
have an adverse effect on those with mental disorders and their carers
(Macintyre et al,
2002; Allardyce et al,
2005). Several study participants would have been left alone all
day if discharged, either because they lived alone or their families worked
long and unsociable hours. This, combined with poor opportunities for local
employment and poor public transport, contributed to a long length of hospital
stay while awaiting daytime placement. Other patients had comorbid physical
illness which was aggravated by poor housing. Individual, household and
neighbourhood social circumstances should be taken into account in discharge
planning and in optimising access to community care. Research is needed to
develop hypotheses about group-level factors that may explain the onset and
outcome of mental disorders (OCampo,
2003).

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank Rob Kydd and Sue Wyeth at South Auckland Health for
facilitating
the study, Clare Salmond for advice on the use
of NZDep96, Gary Jackson and
Sharon Pearce for data, and the
Oakley Mental Health Research Foundation and
the Auckland Medical
Research Foundation for funding.

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Received for publication December 7, 2004.
Revision received November 9, 2005.
Accepted for publication November 30, 2005.
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