Inpatient Psychiatric Treatment of Deaf Adults: Demographic and Diagnostic Comparison

Miss-Delectable

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Inpatient Psychiatric Treatment of Deaf Adults: Demographic and Diagnostic Comparisons With Hearing Inpatients -- Landsberger and Diaz 61 (2): 196 -- Psychiatr Serv

OBJECTIVE: This study examined the diagnostic and clinical features of deaf psychiatric inpatients. METHODS: Archival clinical data for deaf and hard-of-hearing adults (N=30) were compared with data for a random sample of hearing adults (N=60) admitted to a state psychiatric hospital from 1998 to 2008. RESULTS: Significant differences were found between deaf and hearing inpatient groups in the frequency of impulse control disorders (23% versus 2%), pervasive developmental disorders (10% versus 0%), substance use disorders (20% versus 45%), mild mental retardation (33% versus 3%), and personality disorders (17% versus 43%). The deaf group had a larger proportion with diagnoses of psychotic disorder not otherwise specified (17% versus 2%). Deaf inpatients had longer hospitalizations than hearing inpatients (17 months versus ten months). CONCLUSIONS: Clinicians working with the underserved, understudied population of deaf and hard-of-hearing psychiatric inpatients should be aware of the cultural and linguistic differences in assessment and treatment and make efforts to modify their approach.
 
Impulse control, mild MR, and PDD issues in dhh folks are most likely due to syndrome caused deafness.
 
Impulse control, mild MR, and PDD issues in dhh folks are most likely due to syndrome caused deafness.

No no no, DD.

This report is based on cultural and linguistics comparisons.

How a patient's treatment varies so much from an aspect based on hearing and seeing because of deafness itself.
 
Mrs. Bucket, I know. I was simply commenting on the higher rates of some disorders.
 
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