Daily Express

Doctors in A& E miss a third of serious mental health problems

- William Janes

DOCTORS miss almost a third of mental illnesses in patients visiting A& E, a study revealed yesterday.

Medics who treated people coming in with injuries and illnesses between 2006 and 2017 failed to pick up 30 per cent of serious mental health problems.

The number was even higher ( 38 per cent) for people in ethnic minorities, especially those with Black African or Caribbean background­s.

But researcher­s said the data shows promising signs of improvemen­t, with the total number of missed cases shrinking from 52 per cent in 2006. However, stats showed 44 per cent of schizophre­nia cases were missed, along with half of bipolar cases.

The team from University College London believes this could be due to conditions being misdiagnos­ed as other, less severe, mental illnesses.

The team also said improvemen­ts could be down to commitment­s to “person- centred care”, financial incentives or expansion of services designed to spot links between mental and physical illness.

And possible explanatio­ns for the ethnic disparitie­s are

NHS doctors finding it harder to detect conditions in people from other cultural groups, language barriers or the stigma felt by patients.

The researcher­s are now calling for better sharing of data between health services.

Research assistant Hassan Mansour, who led the study, said: “When someone is admitted, it’s important the staff are aware of their other conditions. These might affect what treatments are best.

“We found signs clinicians are more frequently identifyin­g severe mental illnesses in hospital patients than they were a decade ago.”

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