Objectives: To estimate prospectively the incidence of delirium in psychiatric inpatients and to identify risk factors for delirium in this population.
Method: The subjects were nondelirious patients newly admitted to the Calgary General Hospital. The Delirium Symptom Interview (DSI), the Confusion Assessment Method (CAM), and the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) were used to identify incident cases of delirium. In order to evaluate the potential impact of selection bias, we conducted a supplementary analysis using record linkage to an electronic administrative data base with coverage of the target population.
Results: Of 420 admissions to the hospital, 401 subjects provided informed consent and were not delirious at the time of admission. There were 9 incident cases of delirium. The cumulative incidence rate was, therefore, 2.14 per 100 admissions. The record linkage analysis did not uncover evidence of selection bias. Delirium was associated with a significantly increased length of stay in hospital.
Conclusions: Delirium is an uncommon incident event in the psychiatric inpatient population. The incidence rate reported here may be useful as a benchmark for the identification of excessive rates in other inpatient settings. Since delirium is sometimes related to modifiable therapeutic factors, an excessive rate should prompt a search for its causes.