When patients in mental health crises get stuck in Minnesota’s emergency rooms, they stay 25 hours longer on average than necessary — taking up hospital space as well as the time of doctors and nurses, who could otherwise focus on the next emergencies.
Researchers documented the length of these delays by studying patient activity over 14 days last fall at more than 30 Minnesota hospitals, but they also provided vital evidence about which patients were most likely to suffer delays, and why.
Knowing which patients are at risk can help the state come up with treatments that target this population and prevent mental health crises and hospital visits, said Kristin Dillon, a coauthor from Wilder Research, which released the report Monday with the Minnesota Department of Health.
Delays for patients “in a hospital setting when they can be discharged is harmful to patients, caregivers, hospital staff and the health care system,” she said. “However, we cannot take steps to effectively address these discharge delays without understanding the underlying reasons behind the delays.”
Monday’s findings were presented to an advisory council created last year to reduce delays in care and the worsening problem of ER and hospital overcrowding in Minnesota.
Staffing and bed shortages at nursing homes and rehabilitation centers have worsened since the COVID-19 pandemic, leaving hospitals stuck with frail, elderly patients on their inpatient floors. Twin Cities ERs have treated patients in hallway gurneys at peak times when they have run out of beds. But these delays in many ways compounded the longstanding problem of patients in mental health crises being boarded in ERs with nowhere to go.
Hospital inpatient psychiatric units were largely full during the study, and they couldn’t take new patients from ERs until they found space to discharge their existing patients to residential or outpatient treatment programs. The study observed 182 patients in hospital psychiatric units whose discharges were delayed, and on average it took eight days longer than necessary to move them.
The problem was more complex than patients waiting for openings in treatment programs, though. One in five patients stuck in inpatient units was delayed by court decisions over civil commitments, or decisions over their eligibility for insurance benefits or waiver programs, the study showed.