BMC Psychiatry. 2025 Jul 17;25(1):711. doi: 10.1186/s12888-025-07149-9.

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The length of stay (LoS) in psychiatric facilities is a critical metric for healthcare planning and resource allocation. While previous research has established that LoS distributions are typically right-skewed across medical specialties, detailed characterizations of these distributions within psychiatric settings remain limited, particularly regarding variations across diagnostic categories.

METHODS: We conducted a retrospective cross-sectional analysis of 17,687 psychiatric hospitalizations at the University Hospital of Psychiatry Zurich between 2013 and 2020. Using both linear and logarithmic visualizations, we examined LoS distribution patterns across diagnostic groups based on ICD-10 classifications.

RESULTS: Following identified distribution patterns, patients could be categorized into short-stay (1-10 days) and long-stay (11-200 days) groups for comparative analysis. LoS distribution demonstrated a bimodal pattern when visualized on a logarithmic scale, with distinct peaks representing short-term crisis interventions and longer therapeutic hospitalizations. This bimodal distribution was particularly evident in anxiety and stress-related disorders and major depressive disorder. Diagnostic categories differed significantly in their LoS-distribution patterns, with schizophrenia spectrum disorders, organic mental disorders, and bipolar disorders more frequently requiring extended hospitalizations. Long-stay patients exhibited higher admission HoNOS scores (median 20 vs. 18) and were significantly older (median 49 vs. 39 years) than short-stay patients.

CONCLUSIONS: Our findings reveal that psychiatric hospitalization durations follow a bimodal rather than simply right-skewed distribution, suggesting two distinct patient populations requiring fundamentally different treatment approaches. This pattern varies systematically across diagnostic categories but transcends diagnostic boundaries, indicating that factors beyond primary diagnosis influence treatment duration. These results support the development of differentiated care structures addressing both acute crisis intervention and extended therapeutic needs within psychiatric care systems.

PMID:40676565 | DOI:10.1186/s12888-025-07149-9