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Publications (3)4.72 Total impact

  • Article: Patterns of referring of patients with frontotemporal lobar degeneration to psychiatric in- and out-patient services. Results from a prospective multicentre study.
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    ABSTRACT: Dementia with frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTLD) is clinically characterized by the occurrence of various psychiatric symptoms. In a recent study, the hospital-based prevalence of FTLD and the circumstances of the patients' admission to German psychiatric state hospitals were estimated. On the basis of further continuous assessment, this original FTLD group (n = 33) has been enlarged to 58 patients. The authors here present demographic and clinical data, and reasons for admission to geriatric psychiatry hospitals in comparison with 17 patients, who primarily attended the Memory Disorders Clinic of the University of Regensburg. The results implicate that both institutions see patients with different clinical syndromes: (1) patients were primarily referred to the Memory Disorders Clinic presenting memory and/or speech difficulties as the leading symptoms; (2) major reasons for hospitalisation of patients with FTLD in geriatric psychiatry hospitals were behavioural disturbances; (3) late-onset FTLD (>65 years) was more common than previously assumed in both institutions, and (4) increasing age at admission increased the likelihood to obtain a limited diagnostic approach of brain imaging (only cranial computer tomography) to evaluate the cause of dementia.
    Dementia and Geriatric Cognitive Disorders 01/2004; 17(4):269-73. · 2.14 Impact Factor
  • Article: [Fair hospital comparisons -- does the method contracted in Germany enable unbiased results?].
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    ABSTRACT: To evaluate the method for comparison of average length of stay in hospitals as defined in a contract between German health insurance companies and the "Deutsche Krankenhausgesellschaft" (German Hospital Association). Simulation study executing the algorithm agreed upon in different scenarios, which varied the number of hospitals to be compared, the dispersion of diagnostic specialization over hospitals, and the distribution of hospitals' sizes. Scenarios were constructed to realistically reflect the situation in German inpatient treatment of mentally ill patients. By fixing casemix adjustments only on diagnoses of patients and by doing so aggregated on the level of hospitals, the method for comparison yielded artificial differences between hospitals even in a situation where each patient is treated with exactly the same amount of resource allocation (given the individual needs defined for all scenarios). Results of artificial differences were heavily biased against or in favour of the reference hospitals according to the specific condition of the scenario parameters. The contracted method is not capable of achieving fair hospital comparisons, at least not for psychiatric hospitals.
    Das Gesundheitswesen 02/2003; 65(1):8-18. · 0.94 Impact Factor
  • Article: [Hospital financing in in-patient psychiatry via DRG-based prospective payment--The Salzburg experience].
    U Frick, W Barta, H Binder
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    ABSTRACT: Hospital financing via case-related prospective payment sometimes is suspected to be responsible for accelerating the "revolving-door"-phenomenon in psychiatry. According to this reasoning, establishing diagnoses-related groups (DRGs) ruling a prospective payment system could not only reduce lengths of stay but could also simultaneously raise hospitalization and readmission rates. This study analyses the Austrian experience after the implementation of such a payment system, the "performance-oriented financing of hospitals" (leistungsorientierte Krankenanstalten-Finanzierung, LKF) in 1997. Time series analyses based on the complete hospital discharge statistics of the Salzburg province were used as methods. Results showed that neither length of stay, nor hospitalization or readmission rates in psychiatry have substansially changed or deviated from their long-term trends after implementation of the LKF system. Other medical disciplines have experienced statistically significant changes. The possibility to transfer these results to the German psychiatric health care system is discussed.
    Psychiatrische Praxis 08/2001; 28 Suppl 1:S55-62. · 1.64 Impact Factor