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The chapter discusses the position of victims in international criminal justice and the evolution of their status and modalities of their involvement in the administration of justice by international criminal jurisdictions, with a particular focus on the legal regime of the International Criminal Court (ICC). The chapter highlights the centrality of victims as the core constituency of international criminal law and the mismatch between this aspiration and the limited recognition of their agency and rights before the UN ad hoc tribunals. It then examines how the ICC’s architects have sought to bridge this gap in the Court’s Statute and Rules of Procedure and Evidence. The ICC’s legal framework is unprecedented in this respect. Over and above the protective measures necessary on account of their engagement in the proceedings, it granted victims extensive rights to participate and be legally represented at different stages the ICC proceedings as well as the autonomous right to obtain reparations. The chapter surveys the key challenges this ambitious scheme has raised, as far as the admission of victims to participate, the organisation of their legal representation, and the implementation of reparations are concerned, and solutions that have been developed in the Court’s practice to date.
Older people are one of the biggest populations requiring hospital care, and the demand is expected to rise. There is a compelling need to transform hospital environments to meet older-people physical, psychological, and emotional needs. In the UK, certain hospital circumstances such as ward configuration, mealtimes, noise levels, and visiting hours can be detrimental to patients admitted with delirium and to those living with dementia. In rehabilitation settings, lack of meaningful activities, isolation, and boredom are additional key challenges.
Models of good hospital practice catering for old people exist, both in the UK and internationally, and there is strong evidence for their clinical effectiveness. Environmental strategies to maintain orientation and enhance safety in hospital are crucial for a positive experience. Arts-based programmes in acute care settinsg can improve the experience of a hospital admission.
A cultural shift is warranted to champion the delivery an elderly-friendly service. Creating the right environment requires a hospital-wide system, a ward-based service, and a specially trained clinical team. In this chapter we will present examples of essential ingredients for hospitals and wards, and desirable qualities in clinicians who work in collaboration to deliver the best outcomes for an older population.
We investigated the missed treatment opportunities affecting programmes using mid-upper arm circumference (MUAC) as the sole anthropometric criterion for identification and monitoring of children suffering from severe acute malnutrition (SAM).
Design:
Alongside MUAC, we assessed weight-for-height Z-score (WHZ) in children screened and treated according to the national MUAC only protocol in Pakistan. Besides, we collected parents’ perceptions regarding the treatment received by their children through qualitative interviews.
Setting:
Data were collected from October to December 2021 in Tando Allah Yar District, Sindh.
Subjects:
All children screened in the health facilities (n 8818) and all those discharged as recovered (n 686), throughout the district, contributed to the study. All children screened in the community in the catchment areas of five selected health facilities also contributed (n 8459). Parents of forty-one children randomly selected from these same facilities participated in the interviews.
Results:
Overall, 80·3 % of the SAM cases identified during community screening and 64·1 % of those identified in the health facilities presented a ‘WHZ-only’ diagnosis. These figures reached 93·9 % and 84·5 %, respectively, in children aged over 24 months. Among children treated for SAM and discharged as recovered, 25·3 % were still severely wasted according to WHZ. While parents positively appraised the treatment received by their children, they also recommended to extend eligibility to other malnourished children in their neighbourhood.
Conclusion:
In this context, using MUAC as the sole anthropometric criterion for treatment decisions (referral, admission and discharge) resulted in a large number of missed opportunities for children in need of timely and adequate care.
This chapter discusses the role of domestic foreign investment screening legislation and its link to investment treaties. The chapter proceeds to examine the treaty definitions of the concepts of investment and investor and associated controversies. It concludes with an explanation of performance requirements which may be imposed on foreign investors.
Labor Secretary Frances Perkins championed liberal immigration policies between 1933 and 1940. Some efforts were successful, but most were not due to political, economic, and social constraints on immigration policy making, especially in Congress. Yet, she reorganized the enforcement functions of her department when she created the Immigration and Naturalization Service. Narratives abound about the period, though few delve into this reorganization. In this article, I share an analytical framework that I developed, “policy innovation through bureaucratic reorganization,” to explain how Perkins temporarily eased the debarments, as well as deportations, of newcomers by adjusting agency resources, including staffing, budget, and infrastructure. I describe how she responded to pressures from immigration restrictionists by tightening these functions. My narrative adds to the literature on immigration policy history, which has not fully appreciated the role of bureaucratic reorganization. This research bolsters the perspective in political control theory that bureaucratic structure merits as much attention as does legislation as a tool for control.
Catatonia, a severe neuropsychiatric syndrome, has few studies of sufficient scale to clarify its epidemiology or pathophysiology. We aimed to characterise demographic associations, peripheral inflammatory markers and outcome of catatonia.
Methods
Electronic healthcare records were searched for validated clinical diagnoses of catatonia. In a case–control study, demographics and inflammatory markers were compared in psychiatric inpatients with and without catatonia. In a cohort study, the two groups were compared in terms of their duration of admission and mortality.
Results
We identified 1456 patients with catatonia (of whom 25.1% had two or more episodes) and 24 956 psychiatric inpatients without catatonia. Incidence was 10.6 episodes of catatonia per 100 000 person-years. Patients with and without catatonia were similar in sex, younger and more likely to be of Black ethnicity. Serum iron was reduced in patients with catatonia [11.6 v. 14.2 μmol/L, odds ratio (OR) 0.65 (95% confidence interval (CI) 0.45–0.95), p = 0.03] and creatine kinase was raised [2545 v. 459 IU/L, OR 1.53 (95% CI 1.29–1.81), p < 0.001], but there was no difference in C-reactive protein or white cell count. N-Methyl-d-aspartate receptor antibodies were significantly associated with catatonia, but there were small numbers of positive results. Duration of hospitalisation was greater in the catatonia group (median: 43 v. 25 days), but there was no difference in mortality after adjustment.
Conclusions
In the largest clinical study of catatonia, we found catatonia occurred in approximately 1 per 10 000 person-years. Evidence for a proinflammatory state was mixed. Catatonia was associated with prolonged inpatient admission but not with increased mortality.
Evidence for lithium as a maintenance treatment for bipolar disorder type II remains limited since most treatment-prevention studies focus on bipolar disorder type I or do not distinguish between types of bipolar disorder.
Objectives
To compare the impact of lithium discontinuation on hospital utilisation in patients with bipolar disorder type I or schizoaffective disorder and patients with bipolar disorder type II or other bipolar disorder.
Methods
Mirror-image study, examining hospital utilisation within two years before and after lithium discontinuation as part of LiSIE, a retrospective cohort study into effects and side-effects of lithium for the maintenance treatment of bipolar disorder as compared to other mood stabilisers.
Results
For the whole sample, the number of admissions increased from 86 to 185 admissions after lithium discontinuation, with the mean number of admissions/patient/review period doubling from 0.44 to 0.95 (p < 0.001). The number of bed days increased from 2218 to 4240, with the mean number of bed days/patient/review period doubling from 11 to 22 (p = 0.025). This increase in admissions and bed days was exclusively attributable to patients with bipolar disorder type I or schizoaffective disorder.
Conclusions
Our findings suggest that due to a higher relapse risk in patients with bipolar disorder type I or schizoaffective disorder there is a need to apply a higher threshold for discontinuing lithium than for patients with bipolar disorder type II or other bipolar disorder.
Disclosure
Michael Ott has been a scientific advisory board member of Astra Zeneca Sweden, Ursula Werneke has received funding for educational activities on behalf of Norrbotten Region (Masterclass Psychiatry Programme 2014–2018 and EAPM 2016, Luleå, Sweden): Astra
Psychiatric Patients Admissions in Mental health Service of Treviso (Italy) were compared from 2013 to 2017. Trends of Admissions take onto consideration, the presence of Menthal Health Service for Outpatients Care.
Objectives
To point out the distribution of Diagnosis made in Different Years for different patients ages.
Methods
For every patient has been considered the following date : Sex, Age, Marital State, Profession, Psychiatric Diagnosis, Days of Admission, Geografic Origin and KInd of Admission (Voluntary / Involuntay).
Results
It is noticeable the different percentage of Psychiatric Diagnosis in 2013 rather than in 2017. In 2017 it happened a more amount of Psychiatric Admission of Subjects with Substance Addiction Related Disturbs (Alcool included) and Atypical Depression Sindrome and Borderline and Cluster B Perrsonalòity Disorders. Lower amount instead was verified for Diagnosis of Schizofernia, Neurosis and Oligofrenia. Beside it was noticed, an earlier onset of Psychotic Sindrome in Young people often related with Substance Abuse. In the 2017 besides was lower the amount of Involuntary Admission (T.S.O. in Italy) compared with 2013.
Conclusions
Different distribution of Diagnosis is explained by the Evolution Diagnosis Orientation (from D.S.M. IV to I.C.D. 10) About the increased Diagnosis of Substance Addiction Disturbs and Younger age of same subjescts seems caused by a different treatment’s Strategy with brief selective Admissions. Furthermore lesser Involonary Admission seems due to best knowledge of every patients. The most of Theese were indeed already known by Ambulatory Outpatient Mental Health Service.
Patients with depression are more susceptible to cardiovascular illness including vascular surgeries. However, health outcomes after vascular surgery among patients with depression is unknown. This study aimed to investigate associations of depression with post-operative health outcomes for vascular surgical patients.
Methods
A retrospective observational study was conducted using data from a large mental healthcare provider and linked national hospitalization data for the same south London geographic catchment. OPCS-4 codes were used to identify vascular procedures. Health outcomes were compared between those with/without depression including length of hospital stay (LOS), inpatient mortality, and 30 day emergency hospital readmissions. Predictors of these health outcomes were also assessed.
Results
Vascular surgery was received by 9,267 patients, including 446 diagnosed with depression. Patients with depression had a higher risk of emergency admission for vascular surgery (odds ratio [OR] 1.28; 1.03, 1.59), longer index LOS (IRR 1.38; 1.33–1.42), and a higher risk of 30-day emergency readmission (OR 1.82; 1.35–2.47). Patients with depression had higher inpatient mortality after adjustment for sociodemographic status (1.51; 1.03, 2.23) but not on full adjustment, and had longer emergency readmission LOS (1.13; 1.04, 1.22) after adjustment for sociodemographic factors and cardiovascular disease. Correlates of vascular surgery hospitalization among patients with depression included admission through emergency route for longer LOS, inpatient mortality, and 30-day hospital readmission.
Conclusion
Patients with depression undergoing vascular surgery have substantially poorer health outcomes. Screening for depression prior to surgery might be indicated to target preventative measures.
The principle, extent and modalities pursuant to which States allow foreign investors to undertake economic activities over their territory depend mainly on domestic economic and social considerations. Host States strike a balance between conflicting interests and objectives, namely their economic development on the one hand, and the protection of a range of other domestic interests, on the other. Beyond the promotion and facilitation of foreign investments that constitutes a common teleological denominator of international investment agreements, treaty practice displays some diversity in relation to admission and establishment. This diversity reflects different balances struck by States parties between the above-mentioned interests and objectives and, more generally, between liberal and protectionist policies. Chapter 4 provides a study of this treaty practice. It examines briefly the promotion and facilitation of foreign investments before analysing in detail admission and establishment matters.
Like Part II of the textbook more generally, Chapter 3 focuses on the substantive rules that protect foreign investments and public interests, as they are contained in international investment agreements (IIAs), and in particular in those agreements concluded in the 2010s. This focus allows for not only a contemporary view on the content of IIAs, but also offers a comprehensive overview of the substantive rules that form part of treaty practice. Indeed, the rules contained in the IIAs concluded over the second half of the twentieth century focus on the substantive protection and treatment of foreign investments and investors. Although these rules have evolved in the IIAs concluded since that time, they have not disappeared. In addition, new rules have emerged in recent treaty practice that aim at the protection of public interests. This chapter introduces the rules that pertain to these objects, providing an explanation of the specific rationale for each rule as well as their main features. A more detailed analysis of the most important rules and the legal issues that arise from them is provided in the subsequent chapters.
To become a lawyer in Australia you need to be admitted by the Supreme Court as a member of the legal profession. Regulating who can be a member of the profession is a ‘safeguard’ to protect against ‘incompetent or fraudulent’ lawyers. Admission requirements make sure only ‘fit and proper’ individuals with suitable qualifications and training are able to perform legal services. This protects the community and the integrity of the legal profession.
Few studies have examined rate and predictors of self-harm in discharged psychiatric patients.
Aims:
To investigate the rate, coding, timing, predictors and characteristics of self-harm induced somatic admission after discharge from psychiatric acute admission.
Method:
Cohort study of 2827 unselected patients consecutively admitted to a psychiatric acute ward during three years. Mean observation period was 2.3 years. Combined register linkage and manual data examination. Cox regression was used to investigate covariates for time to somatic admission due to self-harm, with covariates changing during follow-up entered time dependently.
Results:
During the observation period, 10.5% of the patients had 792 somatic self-harm admissions. Strongest risk factors were psychiatric admission due to non-suicidal self-harm, suicide attempt and suicide ideation. The risk was increased throughout the first year of follow-up, during readmission, with increasing outpatient consultations and in patients diagnosed with recurrent depression, personality disorders, substance use disorders and anxiety/stress-related disorders. Only 49% of the somatic self-harm admissions were given hospital self-harm diagnosis.
Conclusions:
Self-harm induced somatic admissions were highly prevalent during the first year after discharge from acute psychiatric admission. Underdiagnosing of self-harm in relation to somatic self-harm admissions may cause incorrect follow-up treatments and unreliable register data.
The Mental Health Act (MHA) 2007 made some significant changes from the Mental Health Act 1983, including the fact that detention is now only allowed if an appropriate medical treatment is available to the patient at the time [1]. There was considerable concern at the time that the 2007 Act would lead to an increase in detentions.
Objective
The primary objective is to assess how the change in the English law with the MHA 2007 has affected the number of detentions under the MHA.
Methods
A retrospective, observational and noninterventional study used anonymised and routinely collected data regarding 11,509 people who were formally assessed under the Mental Health Act during the period of 2001–2011 in the county of Norfolk. This included 7885 assessments before the 2007 MHA and 3620 done after implementation.
Results
The proportion of people detained following assessment decreased from 53.2% before the 2007 MHA to 42.9% after implementation (P = .000). The total proportion of patients admitted (whether informally or detained) also decreased from 63.3% before the 2007 MHA to 52.8% thereafter (P = .000).
Conclusion
These results show a significant decrease in the rate of detentions under the MHA since the 2007 Act became law.
Disclosure of interest
The authors have not supplied their declaration of competing interest.
Currently, the evidence for lithium as a maintenance treatment for bipolar disorder type II (BD-II) remains limited. Guidelines commonly extrapolate recommendations for BD-II from available evidence for bipolar disorder type I (BD-I). Comparing the impact of lithium discontinuation is one way of assessing effectiveness in both groups.
Aims
To compare the impact of lithium discontinuation on hospital admissions and self-harm in patients with BD-I or schizoaffective disorder (SZD) and patients with BD-II or other bipolar disorder.
Method
Mirror-image study, examining hospital admissions within 2 years before and after lithium discontinuation in both patient groups. This study was part of a retrospective cohort study (LiSIE) into effects and side-effects of lithium for maintenance treatment of bipolar disorder as compared with other mood stabilisers.
Results
For the whole sample, the mean number of admissions/patient/review period doubled from 0.44 to 0.95 (P<0.001) after lithium discontinuation. The mean number of bed days/patient/review period doubled from 11 to 22 (P = 0.025). This increase in admissions and bed days was exclusively attributable to patients with BD-I/SZD. Not having consulted with a doctor prior to lithium discontinuation or no treatment with an alternative mood stabiliser at the time of lithium discontinuation led to more admissions.
Conclusions
The higher relapse risk in patients with BD-I/SZD suggests a higher threshold for discontinuing lithium than for patients with BD-II/other bipolar disorder. In patients with BD-II/other bipolar disorder, however, judged on the impact of discontinuation alone, lithium did not appear to prevent more severe depressive episodes requiring hospital admission.
With the shift from deinstitutionalization to community care in mental health services, relatives of persons with severe and enduring mental illnesses have had to take over the role as primary caregivers. Disturbed family dynamics have been observed within families with an ‘ill’ member. Although schizophrenia and related mental illnesses are biologically based disorders, environmental stress (including stress within family relationships) plays a major role in the onset and maintenance of symptoms. With this study, we assume that family dynamics play a central role in the course of severe psychiatric illness and hypothesized that dysfunction within family systems is a prognostic indicator of hospitalization in the course of schizophrenia/bipolar and schizoaffective disorders.
Methods:
Prospective, observational cohort study evaluating family functioning of 121 patients (schizophrenia/bipolar and schizoaffective disorder) from community at baseline and followed-up over 12-month period after recruitment. Measurements included demographics, diagnosis, Family Assessment Device – General Functioning, Perceived Criticism Scale, Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale, Global Assessment of Functioning and Social Support Questionnaire-6.
Results:
Significant differences found between patients admitted and not admitted during the 12-month time period for age (p = 0.003), Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS; p = 0.026), Family Assessment Device – General Functioning (FAD-GF; p = 0.007) and Social Support Questionnaire total satisfaction level (p = 0.042) at baseline. Bivariate analysis showed that those admitted into hospital were younger with a higher BPRS score, less social satisfaction and disturbed family dynamics. FAD-GF (p = 0.006) and age (p = 0.022) were significant independent predictors for admission.
Conclusion:
This provides further evidence supporting importance of promoting better family functioning through modified family dynamics, integrating and involving family into the care of such patients.
Introduction: While consultation is a common and important aspect of emergency department (ED) care, a previous systematic review identified significant utilization and process variation across ED's. The aim of this review update was to examine the proportion of the patients undergoing consultation in the ED among recent studies. Methods: Eight primary literature databases and the grey literature were searched. Studies published from 2007 to 2018 focusing on all-comers to the ED and reporting a consultation-related outcome were included. Disease- and specialty-specific studies were not eligible. Two independent reviewers screened studies for relevance, inclusion, quality assessment, and data extraction. Disagreements were resolved through consensus. Means, medians and interquartile ranges are reported. Wilcoxon-rank sum test and one-way ANOVA were used to identify differences between groups, as appropriate. Results: A total of 2632 unique citations and 49 studies from the grey literature were screened, of which 29 primary studies were included. Fifteen studies reported on the proportion of ED patients undergoing consultation, involving EDs in the Middle East (n = 4), North America (n = 4), Asia (n = 4), and Europe (n = 3). Overall, the proportion of patients receiving consultation ranged from 7% to 78% (median: 26%; IQR: 20%, 38%). There were no differences in the proportions of consulted patients based on country of origin. Ten studies were conducted prior to 2013, while five studies recruited patients during and after 2013. The mean proportion of consulted patients was lower for post-2012 studies compared to pre-2012 studies (mean: 18% vs. 36%; p = 0.0048). The proportion of consulted patients admitted to hospital ranged considerably between the 14 reporting studies (median: 56%; IQR: 49%, 76%). No differences in the proportion of admitted patients undergoing a consult were identified based on country of origin or year of recruitment for the study. Conclusion: Although consultation utilization appears to be decreasing overall, there is considerable practice variation in EDs around the world. These differences may result from variation in patient acuity, case-load, staffing levels, institutional and health-system organization, and medical training and future research should explore reasons for these differences.
Introduction: Emergency department (ED) over-crowding and increased wait times are a growing problem. Many interventions have been proposed to decrease patient length of stay and increase patient flow. Early disposition planning is one method to accomplish this goal. In this study we developed statistical models to predict patient admission based on ED administrative data. The objective of this study was to predict patient admission early in the visit with goal of preparation of the acute care bed and other resources. Methods: Retrospective administrative ED data from the Thunder Bay Regional Health Sciences Centre was obtained for the period May 2014 to April 2015. Data were divided into training and testing groups with 80% of data used to train the statistical models. Logistic regression models were developed using administrative variables (i.e., age, sex, mode of arrival, and triage level). Model accuracy was evaluated using sensitivity, specificity, and area under the curve measures. To predict hourly bed requirements, the probability of admission was summed to calculate a pooled bed requirement estimate. The estimated hourly bed requirement was then compared to the historical hourly demand. Results: The logistic regression models had a sensitivity of 23%, specificity of 97%, and an area under the curve of 0.78. Although, admission prediction for a particular individual was satisfactory, the hourly pooled probabilities showed better results. The predicted hourly bed requirements were close to historical demand for beds when compared. Conclusion: I have shown that the number of acute care beds required on an hourly basis can be predicted using triage administrative data. Early admission bed planning would allow resources to be managed more effectively. In addition, during periods of hospital over capacity, managers would be able to prioritize transfers and discharges based on early estimates of ED demand for beds.
Introduction: Consultation in the emergency department (ED) is a common component of emergency health care. Consultation is defined as a case in which an ED physician (EP) requests the services of another physician (consultant) for an ED patient to assist, advise, and/or transfer care when the care required is beyond the expertise of the EP’s practice. While consultation is generally considered required and beneficial for patient care, consultation can also have a negative impact by incurring delays in patient flow and disposition. These delays contribute to ED crowding, patient dissatisfaction and, in some cases, worse health outcomes. Using an a priori protocol and accepted methodology, the aim of this systematic review was to update a previous review on the same topic and determine the proportion of 1) ED visits that involve consultation and 2) consultation cases that result in admission. PROPSPERO registration number: CRD42017054054. Methods: Literature search involved multiple electronic databases (e.g., MEDLINE and EMBASE) and grey literature (e.g., Google Scholar and conference abstracts). Study selection was conducted independently by two reviewers and determined by consensus among the two reviewers with disagreements resolved by a third party. Data extraction was conducted independently by two reviewers and determined by consensus among the two reviewers with disagreements resolved by a third party. A descriptive analysis was conducted. Outcome measure data were aggregated and reported with suitable descriptive statistics such as raw or weighted mean, median, or proportion with 95% confidence interval. Results: Literature search yielded 1,584 studies, of which 65 were included. Two-thirds of studies were conducted in USA or Canada. Of the 65, 54 were focused on a particular patient group or consulting specialty (e.g., psychiatry) while 11 considered the general ED population. Of these 11, the median proportion of ED visits involving consultation was 26%. The median proportion of cases with consultation that resulted in admission was 60%. Conclusion: Consultations in the ED are quite common and many of these cases result in admission. Given their frequency of occurrence and increasing ED crowding, efforts to reduce consult delays and expedite disposition appear warranted.
Introduction: The number of emergency department (ED) visits across Ontario has increased annually over the past two decades leading to overcrowding and longer wait times. ED volume forecasting may provide insight to strategic planners regarding future patient volumes and the effects on health care resources. We investigated the pattern of ED use at the local health integration network (LHIN) level and developed forecasts using historical data. The forecasts were then used to examine the effect on acute care hospital bed requirements and the number of full time equivalent physicians needed. Methods: Aggregated data from the Canadian Institute for Health Information for the period 2003 to 2013 was obtained for each of Ontario’s LHINs. The total number of ED visits per year was first quantified by LHIN and then simple linear regression was used to forecast patient volumes in 2018 and 2023. The rate of hospital admission by LHIN was also calculated. We then used the forecasted volume, admission rate and the total number of acute care hospital beds by LHIN to predict the total number of beds needed by LHIN. Based on the forecasted patient volumes and the hours of coverage model, the total number of full-time equivalent physicians needed was calculated. Results: Over the study period, the number of patients increased from 4 to 37% among LHINs. Admission rates generally decreased from 2003 to 2013. Based on historical trends, all EDs across Ontario are expected to experience increased patient visits in the future but at different rates of growth. Depending on the rate of growth in ED visits, the number of acute care beds needed by LHIN is somewhat variable and affected by the proportion of alternate level of care patients. Given, the forecasted increase in patient volume, the hours of coverage model suggests that approximately 320 additional full-time equivalent ED physicians are needed across the province by 2023. Conclusion: Although all forecasts inherently have a degree of error associated with their estimates, strategic planners require some quantitative prediction of future events to develop initial plans. Through research, these predictions can be focused and refined. The results suggest that many hospitals will experience increased demand for services and will have to do resource allocation planning accordingly to ensure patient demand is met appropriately.