Interpreting data on "institutionalization": not simply counting beds.

2008 
The brief report by Priebe and colleagues (1) attempts to demonstrate that institutional care for people with severe mental disorders has increased in several Western European countries during the 21st century, after several decades of deinstitutionalization in the 20th century. The discussion guardedly suggests that such a trend is occurring, implying an underlying political shift toward more restrictive and risk-averse forms of care. Some caution is advised. First, the term “institutionalization” carries many meanings. The lack of a specific definition in the report by Priebe and colleagues matters. Nobody would deny that people need houses to live in and beds to sleep in. It is unhelpful to group all places available for people with mental disorders and categorize these as institutions. Data should differentiate between “community-based facilities” that offer personalized interventions, which likely would include residential facilities, and “institutional places” that impose standardized care. Central to the analyses of the numbers in this report are the time points. The baseline is 1990, which arguably was the end of the Cold War. However, 1990 is not significant as a time point for bed closures. The number of psychiatric beds peaked in the 1950s in most countries, with a rapid fall in the subsequent decades. The challenge of the 1990s, in Western Europe as well as in the United States, was that the decline in the number of hospital beds was not compensated for by the development of community services, including residential care facilities, which left patients who would previously have been institutionalized at high risk of destitution. Since then many countries have invested large sums to support the development of nursing homes and residential care facilities; such investment has occurred at a fast pace, as this brief report illustrates. This line of reasoning points to another conclusion—namely, that we are not dealing with an overdevelopment of beds but, as a result of inadequate planning, with a lag in time between hospital closures and the availability of residential places. The increase in the number of forensic beds in some countries is a different issue. Such beds were established by governments in response to public pressure resulting from highprofile incidents and an inadequate supply of beds after the closure of psychiatric hospitals. The overall figures hide a shift in several countries from a small number of large prison hospitals toward smaller-scale specialty psychiatric units. Also, it should be recognized that even though the number of forensic beds has increased substantially in a few countries, these places make a relatively small contribution to the overall number of psychiatric beds. Relevant to the argument is the in
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