The legal possibility of subjecting out-patients to mandatory care has steadily increased in recent decades, especially in North America, Oceania and Europe.Reference Meldrum, Kelly, Calderon, Brekke and Braslow1–Reference Burns, Rugkåsa, Molodynski, Dawson, Yeeles and Vazquez-Montes4 Norway authorised out-patient commitment as early as in 1961, when patients discharged with an out-patient commitment order could be recalled to in-patient care without any further formalities. In 1999, the Norwegian Mental Health Act was amended, authorising out-patient commitment without a prior in-patient period. The coercive power of out-patient commitment orders in Norway is restricted to an obligation to comply with all scheduled treatment appointments, if necessary with the assistance of the police and the use of force. The legal criteria for out-patient commitment are the same as for in-patient commitment, including a requirement to make a global assessment as to whether the intervention is the best option for the patient or not. Out-patient commitment orders are valid for 1 year, but can be renewed by an independent review board an unlimited number of times. It is also noteworthy that the Norwegian Mental Health Act requires separate orders for involuntary placement and involuntary treatment, for both in- and out-patients. Norway is among the countries with the highest number of mental health workers per capita (240 per 100 000 population).5 The majority of these are in out-patient services, and there has been a drive to allocate an increasing proportion of resources to community services in recent years. Further details about the Norwegian out-patient commitment population, the Norwegian out-patient commitment framework and what being on an out-patient commitment entailed for patients is described in our previous paper from the Norwegian Outpatient Commitment Study (NOCS).Reference Rugkåsa, Nyttingnes, Simonsen, Benth, Lau and Riley6
Internationally, out-patient commitment has raised questions about the justification and effect of the order: does out-patient commitment reduce the overall use of coercion in the care of people with severe mental disorders, or does it increase coercion by adding coercive care in the community to in-patient coercion?Reference Sjøstrøm, Zetterberg and Markstrom7,Reference Lawton-Smith, Dawson and Burns8 Another frequently raised question concerns the impact of out-patient commitment on the use of mental health services, especially in-patient care.Reference Burns, Rugkåsa, Molodynski, Dawson, Yeeles and Vazquez-Montes4,Reference Kisely and Hall9–Reference Swartz, Swanson, Wagner, Burns, Hiday and Borum11 Further, perceived coercion of patients with out-patient commitment orders has received increased attention in recent years.Reference Riley, Høyer and Lorem12,Reference Corring, O'Reilly and Sommerdyck13 The aim of NOCS was to collect representative and complete data on the use of out-patient commitment in Norway. In this paper, we report on population-based incidence and prevalence rates, and changes in the utilisation of mental health care services before and after patients were subjected to out-patient commitment, as well as predictors for the duration of out-patient commitment orders and time to readmission.
Method
Study design
NOCS is a retrospective case register study based on the examination of medical files of all patients with an out-patient commitment order between 2008 and 2012 in six Norwegian catchment areas. For the subsample of those who received their first-ever out-patient commitment order in 2008 and 2009, we recorded the use of in-patient services 3 years before and after the out-patient commitment order.
Settings
The six study sites were located in different geographical areas across Norway. Sites were strategically selected in order to include both rural and urban populations. The areas are described elsewhere.Reference Rugkåsa, Nyttingnes, Simonsen, Benth, Lau and Riley6 The sites were the University Hospital of North Norway, Helse Bergen Trust, Sørlandet Hospital Trust, Innlandet Hospital Trust, Akershus University Hospital and Lovisenberg Hospital. The latter two are located in the Oslo area, the capital. The total population in the combined catchment areas equals one-third of the total Norwegian population aged 18 years or over, which was 3 867 645 in 2012.
Participants
All patients aged 18 years or above who were on an out-patient commitment order at the beginning of 2008 were included in the study. Further, we added all new out-patient commitment orders made from 1 January 2008 to 31 December 2012. The total population in the combined catchment areas was 867 645 people (aged 18 years or above, 2012 figures). We identified a total of 1414 patients, representing 1700 out-patient commitment orders; of these, 274 patients received their first out-patient commitment in 2008 and 2009. Of all patients, 226 (16.0%) had two out-patient commitment episodes and 30 (2.1%) had three out-patient commitment episodes. More than half of the patients (52.8%) were in the 30- to 50-year age group, with a slight predominance of men (56.4%). Diagnoses were only recorded for a subsample of 274 patients, and showed that 76.9% were diagnosed within the schizophrenia disorders spectrum, 16.5% with affective mood disorders and 6.6% other diagnoses.
Exclusion criteria
Participating hospitals sometimes appeared to use out-patient commitment to facilitate in-patient transfers from one service or ward to another, and many orders consequently ended after a few days. As we considered such very short term out-patient commitments not to relate to community treatment, we excluded these, and any other out-patient commitment orders lasting for fewer than 7 days. We also excluded involuntary in-patients placed on out-patient commitment during stays in general hospitals, as well as people who were placed on out-patient commitment following admission in one of the participating sites but who lived and received community care outside the catchment area. For those who moved out of the area or country, we censored data on the date they moved.
Data collection and data management
Data were collected from the electronic medical records at each site between 1 January 2008 and 1 January 2012. To identify all patients who met the inclusion criteria, we searched the administrative electronic system (DIPS) used at all study sites. We cooperated closely with administrative staff working with this system to identify all potential participants. Data from patients' files were transferred to a registration form created specifically for the study. Five cases were piloted, which resulted in minor adjustments to the registration form. In a few cases, data were incongruent or incomplete. In such cases, we closely examined patients' entire records, including relevant referral notes, discharge notes, nurses' notes, reports from out-patient services, and correspondence between services, including out-patient clinics. All data were meticulously checked to resolve potential discrepancies in the data-set and we held regular team meetings.
For the total sample, we recorded a limited number of variables: demography, current out-patient commitment status, number and duration of out-patient commitment episodes in 2008–2012, and whether patients received an involuntary treatment order in conjunction with the out-patient commitment order or not. For those with their first-ever out-patient commitment order in 2008 and 2009 we recorded more comprehensive data (58 variables), including their consumption of in-patient care 3 years before and after the first-ever out-patient commitment order. The in-patient's admission resulting in the patient's first-ever out-patient commitment was included in the number of in-patient-episodes 3 years before out-patient commitment. Total numbers of involuntary in-patient placements each year from 2008 to 2013 were obtained through routine annual reports at each participating site.
Statistical analyses
Incidence rates and point prevalence rates were calculated per 100 000 population (18 years of age or above) for each study year from 2008 to 2012. Poisson regression was used to test for overall difference in incidence and point prevalence rates between sites. To describe the sample and subsamples, we calculated means (standard deviations) and medians (first and third quartiles) for continuous variables, while proportions were calculated for categorical variables. The Mann–Whitney U-test, Kruskal-Wallis H-test, Wilcoxon signed-ranks test and Pearson's chi-squared test were used to compare groups when appropriate.
Kaplan–Meier survival analysis with log-rank tests was performed to estimate crude associations between duration of the first-ever out-patient commitment order and the following variables: site, gender, age, diagnosis, time since first contact with psychiatric services, use of psychiatric services before out-patient commitment, living alone or not, involuntary admissions before first-ever out-patient commitment order, reference to danger to self or others, involuntary depot medication and follow-up variables. The same analysis was performed for time to readmission. We used Cox regression analyses to estimate independent associations and to calculate mutually adjusted hazard ratios (95% confidence intervals) for the above-mentioned covariates. All statistical analyses were performed using the SPSS statistical package 24 and SAS 9.4.
Ethics
The study was approved by the Regional Committee for Medical and Health Research Ethics, Region North (REC North, Project No. 2010/2268), and conducted in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki. To provide accurate data on incidence and prevalence of out-patient commitment, completeness of data was crucial and the REC granted access to medical files without consent by individual patients. All data were de-identified before being stored and used in the analysis.
Results
Incidence and prevalence of out-patient commitment
For the whole sample, population-based incidence rates of out-patient commitment varied from 20.7 to 28.4 over the study years (Table 1), while annual point prevalence figures on 31 December each year ranged between 36.5 and 48.9 per 100 000 inhabitants aged 18 years or above in the same period (Table 1). Incidence and prevalence rates varied significantly between sites, from 5.5 to 51.1 and 10.7 to 108.5, respectively (P < 0.001). For the whole sample, both incidence and prevalence rates increased over time (test for trend P = 0.022 and P < 0.001, respectively).
a. New out-patient commitment orders, n = absolute number of orders from 1 Jan to 31 Dec each year.
b. Rates per 100 000 population (18 years of age and above, 1 January each study year).
c. Point prevalence, n = absolute number of people at 31 Dec each year.
All first-ever out-patient commitment periods (n = 274) took effect at discharge from an involuntary in-patient period. Mean length of hospital stay leading to first-ever out-patient commitment was 124 days (s.d. = 360), with a median of 50 days (Quarter (Q)1–Q3 26–104). Eighteen patients received their first-ever out-patient commitment order directly after their first-ever in-patient period. For the total sample, 10.6% of all compulsory in-patient admissions to the participating sites were converted to out-patient commitment at discharge, varying from 9.2% to 11.9% between sites.
Duration of out-patient commitment orders
Mean and median duration were 727 (s.d. = 889) and 354 (Q1–Q3 152–980) days respectively (n = 1414). Duration of the out-patient commitment episodes differed significantly between sites, from a median of 425 days (Q1–Q3 193–1415) at the University Hospital of North Norway to a median of 273 days (Q1–Q3 118–847) at Innlandet Hospital (P = 0.001). At the end of the study period, 429 patients (30.3%) were still under the out-patient commitment order.
For those with the first-ever out-patient commitment episode (n = 274), mean duration was 465 days (s.d. = 466) and median duration was 271 days (Q1–Q3 125–713). The mean varied from 370 (s.d. = 423) to 652 (s.d. = 517) days, and the median varied from 170 days (Q1–Q3 99–681) to 525 (Q1–Q3 197–1140) between sites (P = 0.065). For 174 (63.5%) patients with a first-ever out-patient commitment, the episode lasted less than a year. Forty (14.6%) patients were still on their first-ever out-patient commitment 3 years after the order was implemented, while five (1.8%) of the patients with a first-time-ever out-patient commitment decision died during the follow-up period.
In the Kaplan–Meier analysis on the 274 patients placed on an out-patient commitment in 2008–2009, the following variables predicted longer duration of out-patient commitment: younger age (P = 0.040), having a F20–29 diagnosis (schizophrenia disorders spectrum) (P < 0.001), having the first hospital stay more than 3 years ago (P = 0.045), living along (P = 0.025), having both treatment needs and dangerousness noted as the reasons for an out-patient commitment (P = 0.017) and being on depot medication (P < 0.001) (Supplementary Fig. 1 available at https://doi.org/10.1192/bjo.2019.60). After mutual adjustment in the Cox regression model, site (P = 0.042) also became a significant predictor of duration of out-patient commitment. In addition, longer out-patient commitment duration was predicted by having the first hospital stay more than 3 years ago (P = 0.041) and being on depot medication (P < 0.001) (Table 2).
Ref., reference.
a. Hazard ratios (HRs) are mutually adjusted in multivariable Cox regression analyses. For duration of out-patient commitment orders increased HRs are associated with a shorter duration of out-patient commitment, whereas for time to readmission increased HRs are associated with shorter time to readmissions.
Compulsory treatment orders
A separate involuntary treatment order was made for 645 (45.6%) of the 1414 patients during their out-patient commitment episode, and the proportion varied by site from 19.3 to 77.5% (P < 0.001). Involuntary treatment orders were more prevalent in older patients: 51.4% of those 40 years or older versus 39.1% for those younger than 40 years (P<0.001), while there was no gender difference (P = 0.078).
Use of in-patient care 3 years before and after the first-ever out-patient commitment
In total, 209 patients with a first-ever out-patient commitment were studied in this group. Although the number of admissions did not differ significantly between the 3 years before and the 3 years after the first out-patient commitment order (P = 0.092), patients had fewer total in-patient days (P < 0.001) and fewer in-patient days per admission (P = 0.043), in the 3 years after the out-patient commitment order than in the 3 years before (supplementary Table 1). The number of readmissions varied significantly between sites, but increased only at the University Hospital of North Norway (P = 0.039). For those who were readmitted, time to first in-patient readmission after first-ever out-patient commitment varied from zero to 1027 days, with a median duration of 55 days (Q1–Q3 5–218). Forty-five patients on their first-ever out-patient commitment were not readmitted during follow-up care.
Time to readmission
In the Kaplan–Meier analysis (n = 257), time between the first-ever out-patient commitment and the first readmission to a mental health facility differed between sites (P = 0.006) (Supplementary Fig. 2). All patients used antipsychotic medication, but patients using antipsychotic medication during the whole out-patient commitment period had longer time to readmission than those who took antipsychotic medication but not during the entire period (P = 0.008). Further, patients with more than one admission 3 years before the first-ever out-patient commitment were readmitted sooner to a mental health facility (P = 0.026). After mutual adjustment in the Cox regression model (P<0.001), using antipsychotic medication during the whole out-patient commitment period predicted longer time to readmission (P = 0.054), while the number of admissions 3 years before the first-ever out-patient commitment predicted shorter time to readmission (P = 0.014) (Table 2).
Discussion
Use of out-patient commitment
Incidence and point prevalence rates found in the present study are higher than rates reported from England,Reference Trevithick, Carlile, Nodiyal and Keown14 but lower than most jurisdictions in New Zealand and Australia, where rates are reported to be above 100 per 100 000 population at risk.Reference O'Donoghue, Brophy, Owens, Rasic, McCullough and Huang3,Reference O'Brien15,Reference Light, Kerridge, Ryan and Robertson16 This cannot be explained by demographic differences, as our study sample shows the same characteristics as found in most other out-patient commitment studies. However, reservations should be made when incidence and prevalence rates between jurisdictions are compared, because reference populations vary in reports. Some rates are based on total populations, others on adults only and some are based on adults up to the age of 65.Reference O'Donoghue, Brophy, Owens, Rasic, McCullough and Huang3,Reference Trevithick, Carlile, Nodiyal and Keown14
Patients were middle aged (30–50 years) with a slight male predominance (56.4%).Reference Burns, Rugkåsa, Molodynski, Dawson, Yeeles and Vazquez-Montes4,Reference Rugkåsa, Nyttingnes, Simonsen, Benth, Lau and Riley6,Reference Churchill, Owen, Singh and Hotopf17 The percentage of all involuntary in-patients who received an out-patient commitment order at discharge varied between 9.2 and 11.9% over the study years, which is about the same level as reported from England,Reference Trevithick, Carlile, Nodiyal and Keown14 but lower than other jurisdictions.Reference Burgess, Bindman, Leese, Henderson and Szmukler18 The percentages of involuntary in-patients discharged on out-patient commitment orders as well as incidence and prevalence rates differed significantly between sites in the present study. The finding is not surprising as geographical variations within jurisdictions for both in-patient commitment and out-patient commitment are more the rule than the exception.Reference O'Brien15,Reference Light, Kerridge, Ryan and Robertson16,Reference Weich, McBride, Twigg, Duncan, Keown and Crepaz-Keay19 The mechanisms underlying such differences are not fully understood, and cannot be explained by demographics, disorder severity or service structures alone.
A general problem related to reports on out-patient commitment incidence and prevalence rates is the varying quality of administrative data. In Norway and Denmark, discrepancies have been found between data recorded by the health authorities and research data based on patients' files. Research data usually identified more cases than those reported by health authorities.Reference Iversen, Høyer and Sexton20,Reference Poulsen21 A strength of the present study is that data on incidence and prevalence rates are complete, because we were allowed to access all patients' medical files without the consent of individual patients, and data on out-patient commitment in the files were rarely missing. In addition, all data were thoroughly verified by the research team. Thus, we feel confident that the data reported in this study are well suited as a reference point for developments in the use of out-patient commitment, as well as comparisons with other jurisdictions on the use of out-patient commitment.
It is impossible to draw any firm conclusions as to whether a rational use of out-patient commitment is reflected in the proportion of in-patients discharged on an out-patient commitment order, or the incidence and prevalence rates found in this or other studies. To evaluate the use of out-patient commitment orders, one needs to consider the purpose of such orders. Out-patient commitment has different and often ambiguous justifications in different countries. Justifications for the introduction of out-patient commitment include efforts to reduce in-patient care, to increase after-care adherence, to reduce relapse, to prevent revolving-door regimes, to minimise coercive care, to prevent violence or a mixture of these aims. In this context, factors such as the coercive power of out-patient commitment orders, the expressed aims of such orders and how out-patient commitment works in practice, need to be considered. Likewise, the quality and availability of out-patient mental healthcare and social services are important factors when assessing the rationality and efficacy of out-patient commitment regimes.Reference Meldrum, Kelly, Calderon, Brekke and Braslow1
Duration of out-patient commitment orders and time to readmission
The median duration of out-patient commitment in our study (354 days) is close to what was found in a study from England that followed up patients on community-treatment orders over 36 months (364 days).Reference Burns, Yeeles, Koshiaris, Vazquez-Montes, Molodynski and Puntis22 In both studies, the mean duration was longer, reflecting a relatively small group of patients on long periods of out-patient commitment. The determinants of longer out-patient commitment duration found in the current study indicate that patients with a longer history of severe mental illness are likely to spend a longer time under out-patient commitment orders. The differences between sites in duration of out-patient commitment orders may reflect local differences in treatment cultures and service provision. Qualitative interviews with clinicians responsible for patients on an out-patient commitment in Norway revealed different responses to patients who seemed to benefit from the out-patient commitment regime: some clinicians underlined the importance of continuing out-patient commitment for patients who did well, whereas others said they discontinued out-patient commitment because the patients had improved and could be managed without mandated treatment.Reference Riley, Lorem and Høyer23 The impact of treatment culture and ideology on the use of out-patient commitment is little researched, and future studies on this area should be encouraged.
Our findings that many in-patient episodes before out-patient commitment predicted shorter time to readmission, and that using antipsychotic medication during the whole out-patient commitment period predicted longer time to readmission, could be explained by the same phenomenon, namely adherence to medication, but we are unable to draw any reliable conclusion based on the study data. Interaction between in-patient care, out-patient commitment and voluntary out-patient care is complex, and influential factors might have been omitted from our study. Differences between sites in time to readmission are also likely to reflect local differences in treatment cultures and service provision.
Outcome of out-patient commitment orders
The most common outcome measure used in assessing out-patient commitment regimes is changes in the use of in-patient services before and after out-patient commitment treatment.Reference Barnett, Matthews, Lloyd-Evans, Mackay, Pilling and Johnson2,Reference Kisely and Hall9 In our study we found no reduction in number of admissions, but significant reductions in total number of in-patient days (P<0.001) and number of days per admission (P = 0.043) when comparing 3 years before with 3 years after implementation of a first-ever out-patient commitment order. The number of readmissions was also reduced, but not significantly (P = 0.092). However, all randomised controlled trials on out-patient commitment programmes have found no evidence that out-patient commitment regimes reduce the use of in-patient care.Reference Burns, Rugkåsa, Molodynski, Dawson, Yeeles and Vazquez-Montes4,Reference Kisely and Hall9–Reference Swartz, Swanson, Wagner, Burns, Hiday and Borum11 In this respect, reservations should be made since the before/after design applied in this study is less robust than randomised controlled designs. Nevertheless, we believe that use of in-patient services as an outcome measure can be questioned regardless of study design. It makes a considerable difference whether the readmission is at the request of the patient or involuntary. Many patients subjected to out-patient commitment have a long psychiatric history and many have poor social supports and networks.Reference Rugkåsa, Nyttingnes, Simonsen, Benth, Lau and Riley6,Reference Churchill, Owen, Singh and Hotopf17 Patients may sometimes feel a need for a more protected and safer environment that can be offered by regular out-patient services. Crucial factors in this context are that patients are in control of when they can access and leave in-patient services and that in-patient treatment is on a voluntary basis, despite being under an out-patient commitment order. Such user-initiated in-patient periods may be perceived in a positive light, unlike coercive readmissions to in-patient care. A small-scale study from NorwayReference Heskestad and Tytlandsvik24 on the effect of letting patients with long-term psychotic disorders and comorbid substance misuse decide on in-patient care themselves, is relevant in this context. Despite shortcomings in study design, such as the selection of patients authorised to make self-determined admissions, the outcome was noteworthy: the number of readmissions went up, whereas the length of stay, both per admission and in total, went dramatically down (mean 2.5 days). Most important, involuntary admissions were reduced by 50%.
The question of readmission as an outcome measure in out-patient commitment studies was raised in 2001,Reference Høyer and Ferris25,Reference Draine26 but the use of in-patient care is still the most common outcome measure in quantitative studies on out-patient commitment regimes. In the present study, we attempted to record voluntary versus involuntary readmissions, but such data were either lacking or unclear in many cases, which meant that we had to exclude the voluntary/involuntary distinction from the analysis. We are not aware of any outcome studies of out-patient commitment that have distinguished between voluntary and involuntary readmissions. Research incorporating this distinction can provide a better understanding of the impact on in-patient care from a voluntary–involuntary perspective.
Pattern of out-patient commitment use
All patients in our study with a first-ever out-patient commitment order (n = 274) were transferred to out-patient commitment regimes directly after discharge from an in-patient stay. Unfortunately, we did not record whether this applied to the whole sample (n = 1414). Our data collectors, however, could not remember any cases of out-patient commitment orders that did not directly follow discharge from an in-patient period. This finding was surprising given the heated public debate when the possibility of making an out-patient commitment order without any prior in-patient period was introduced in 1999. Opponents of the proposal believed that this option represented a widening of the coercive net. Apart from a review from the USA reporting that eight states have the option to place patients on out-patient commitment without any prior in-patient period,Reference Meldrum, Kelly, Calderon, Brekke and Braslow1 we are not aware of other jurisdictions where direct out-patient commitment placement is a legal option. Why clinicians may refrain from using this possibility needs to be explored in future research.
Out-patient commitment and involuntary treatment
Just under half of the first-time out-patient commitment patients received an involuntary treatment order, a requirement under the Norwegian Mental Health Act for the treatment of involuntarily placed patients without valid consent. Further, the frequency of involuntary treatment orders varied significantly between sites, from 19.3 to 77.5%. As patients report in qualitative studies, the most controversial issue concerns medication regimes, where patients challenge the kind of medication, dosage, duration and method of drug administration.Reference Riley, Høyer and Lorem12,Reference Corring, O'Reilly and Sommerdyck13 Why so many patients on an out-patient commitment seem to comply with the medication prescribed without being subject to a separate involuntary treatment order is an interesting question. One possible explanation might be that patients on an out-patient commitment usually have long-term experience of mental health services, including the use of involuntary measures. This has taught them that if they resist taking the prescribed medication, an involuntary treatment order would be made, which could place them in a worse situation than if they comply.Reference Riley, Høyer and Lorem12 If this holds true, it can be questioned whether patients on an out-patient commitment without an involuntary treatment order take their medication voluntarily based on free consent. Norway is one of the few countries in Europe where a separate order for involuntary treatment is required in addition to the involuntary placement order. The obligation to make separate decisions for involuntary placement and treatment is intended to be an additional legal safeguard for interventions that may represent a serious violation of patients' integrity. The fact that so many patients on an out-patient commitment in this study do not have an involuntary treatment order, and thus miss the opportunity to legally challenge involuntary treatment, is a matter of concern from a patients' rights and patient autonomy perspective.
Implications
Determining the factors resulting in the pronounced variations in the use of out-patient commitment between sites calls for further study. When considering readmissions as an outcome measure in out-patient commitment studies, it may be important to distinguish between voluntary and involuntary in-patient placement. Also, the reason why only fewer than half of the patients with an out-patient commitment had a separate involuntary treatment order needs to be studied in more detail.
Funding
This article presents independent research funded by the Norwegian Directorate of Health, Northern Norway Regional Health Authority and UIT The Arctic University of Norway.
Acknowledgements
We wish to thank all those who helped with the time-consuming data collection: Lisbeth Mørch and Heidi Magnussen (University Hospital of North Norway), Tone Breines Simonsen, Nurettin Erman and Caroline Lambert Dahr (Akershus University Hospital), Martin Åm (Lovesenberg Hospital), Eva Mette Haldorsen Leknes (Helse Bergen Trust), Renate Dahl Paulsen and Eirik Ragnar Solheim (Sørlandet Hospital Trust) and Kjell Nordby and Toril Smaaberg (Innlandet Hospital Trust).
Supplementary material
Supplementary material is available online at https://doi.org/10.1192/bjo.2019.60.
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