General psychiatric approach

Revision as of 22:11, 10 November 2016 by Humanguy (talk | contribs) (→‎Management)

Background

Clinical Features

Mental Status Exam

  • General Appearance
  • Orientation and Attention
  • Speech
  • Mood and affect
  • Thought Patterns (process, content)
  • Psychomotor behavior
  • Insight and Judgement

Differential Diagnosis

General Psychiatric

Evaluation

General ED Psychiatric Workup

Evaluation

Management

General ED Psychiatric Management

  • Non-pharmacologic
    • Verbal de-escalation
    • Offer comforting items: blanket, meal, pillow, etc
    • Quiet room
    • Physical restraints (should administer medications if restraints used, as decreases restraint time)
  • Pharmacologic: Goal is to calm patient without oversedation
  • Non-pharmacologic
    • Verbal de-escalation
    • Offer comforting items: blanket, meal, pillow, etc
    • Quiet room
    • Physical restraints
      • should administer medications if restraints used (decreases restraint time)
  • Pharmacologic: Goal is to calm patient without oversedation
    • No history of psychosis
    • Known or suspected underlying psychotic illness
      • Continue treatment with previous antipsychotic or
      • PO: olanzapine 5-10mg or risperidone 0.5-2mg +/- lorazepam: 0.5-2mg
      • IM: olanzapine 2.5-20mg ""or"" ziprasidone 10-20mg or
      • (PO/IM/IV) Haloperidol 0.5-5mg +/- lorazepam 0.5-2mg

Disposition

See Also

External Links

References