Description

Book Synopsis

This book focuses on the operational and clinical strategies needed to improve care of Emergency Psychiatric patients. Boarding of psychiatric patients in ED's is recognized as a national crisis. The American College of Emergency Physicians identified strategies to decrease boarding of psychiatric patients as one of their top strategic goals.

Currently, there are books on clinical care of psychiatric patients, but this is the first book that looks at both the clinical and operational aspects of caring for these patients in ED setting. This book discusses Lean methodology, the impact of long stay patients using queuing methodology, clinical guidelines and active treatment of psychiatric patients in the ED.



Trade Review

"All clinicians in Emergency Departments espouse to provide care for the whole person, yet those individuals with psychiatric and mental health conditions in EDs all too often find timely and competent care woefully lacking.

Similar to the recent trends of integrating mental health services into primary care, this book provides expertise and practical guidance for ED physicians and nurses to increase competencies for diagnosing and treating common mental health conditions.

This innovative model of care in EDs proactively and reliably addresses the majority of patients’ psychiatric and mental health needs, and reserves psychiatric consultation services and transfers to psychiatric treatment facilities for those patients who cannot be adequately treated by ED clinicians."

Patricia Rutherford, RN, MS

Vice President

Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI)

"The authors not only have a deep understanding of emergency psychiatry but also of operational improvement. The mix makes this book a needed reference for anyone focused on a patient centered approach for this vulnerable population."

Kevin Nolan, Statistician, Improvement Advisor, and Senior Fellow

Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI)

"The authors have organized and written a timely and necessary book on the care of the acute psychiatric patient in the Emergency Department.

Over 2 million people a year seek care for behavioral health care problems in hospital EDs at a cost of over $4 billion.

Behavioral health patients seeking care in the emergency department have the same hopes, needs, and fears as the rest of the patients who present to our EDs for evaluation and treatment.

The ED is often an intense and stressful work environment where staff must perform rapid assessments and make swift treatment decisions.

ED staff and team members, dedicated, focused, and highly trained, too often feel overwhelmed, burdened and at times even threatened by the need to provide care for behavioral health patients.

There is a great deal of variation in ED expertise, training and resource allocation for emergency mental health problems, which can lead to sub-optimal care and negative patient and staff experiences.

The management of acute behavioral emergencies and crisis intervention are simply and clearly described in this book. The tactics, tools and techniques outlined here can elevate our approach to emergency department psychiatry and allow our emergency medicine colleagues to rise above our current challenges and frustrations.

Balan et al. apply approaches, lessons and insights from both evidence - based medicine and Lean service operations to behavioral health patients, defining best practices and demonstrating the benefits and positive impact on patient care, flow and safety.

Big Book of Emergency Department Psychiatry is a practical playbook for the challenges at hand. The authors explain simply and clearly how to get it done."

Kirk Jensen, MD, MBA, FACEP

Chief Innovation Officer, EmCare, Inc.

Chief Medical Officer, BestPractices, Inc.

Studer Faculty Member and National Speaker

Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI) Faculty Member

"The management of psychiatric patients seeking care in the emergency department is one of the most complex and important issues in modern emergency medicine. The patients are frequently disenfranchised and do not receive high quality or timely medical care. As a result, these patients impose a tremendous impact on ED resources and flow.

This book provides comprehensive insights into psychiatric care in the ED and operational improvement using Lean Healthcare concepts. It will help you and your leadership team create a patient-centric culture where a community of scientists continuously improve value for psychiatric patients, hospital and society."

Jody Crane, MD, MBA

Principal, X32 Healthcare

Author of "The Definitive Guide to Emergency Department Operational Improvement: Employing Lean Principles with Current ED Best Practices to Create the "No Wait" Department"

"Innovative, informative and inspiring book, with captivating stories that display the ins and outs of psychiatric emergency services. A must read, especially the chapters on correctional emergency psychiatry and the concept of Lean in healthcare."

Mardoche Sidor, MD

Assistant Professor of Psychiatry, Columbia University

Medical Director

The Center for Alternative Sentencing and Employment Services (CASES)

"Big Book of Emergency Department Psychiatry is big as it should be; it is the most comprehensive text on emergency psychiatry in print. Not only does it guide one to the diagnosis and management of emergency room patients but it also addresses operational issues in various settings. The emergency room is a team effort and Big Book of Emergency Department Psychiatry includes the perspectives of its members: psychiatrist, nurse, social worker and non-psychiatric emergency doctor.

Make room for it on your bookshelf."

David W Preven, MD

Clinical Professor

Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

"Complete, accurate and especially timely. A must read for any emergency department leader engaged in improving care for this vulnerable population."

Seth Thomas, MD, FACEP

Director of Quality & Performance

CEP America

"Big Book of Emergency Department Psychiatry is empathically written and valuable to anyone that has ever experienced or cared for someone dealing with a psychiatric emergency. It has a dose of rigor, evidence and science and it conveys the personal experience of some of our peers and it keeps you wanting to read more. It is a tremendous compendium of the state of knowledge of the specialty and art of emergency psychiatry.

Very soon, this book will become the must-read for this specialty for trainees and experienced mental health professionals alike.
I congratulate the authors on an excellent, disciplined, rigorous work that retains the human perspective while educating the reader."

Carlos Rueda MD, MBA
Chairman, Department of Psychiatry
St. Joseph’s Healthcare System
Trinitas Regional Medical Center


"All clinicians in Emergency Departments espouse to provide care for the whole person, yet those individuals with psychiatric and mental health conditions in EDs all too often find timely and competent care woefully lacking.

Similar to the recent trends of integrating mental health services into primary care, this book provides expertise and practical guidance for ED physicians and nurses to increase competencies for diagnosing and treating common mental health conditions.

This innovative model of care in EDs proactively and reliably addresses the majority of patients’ psychiatric and mental health needs, and reserves psychiatric consultation services and transfers to psychiatric treatment facilities for those patients who cannot be adequately treated by ED clinicians."

Patricia Rutherford, RN, MS

Vice President

Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI)

"The authors not only have a deep understanding of emergency psychiatry but also of operational improvement. The mix makes this book a needed reference for anyone focused on a patient centered approach for this vulnerable population."

Kevin Nolan, Statistician, Improvement Advisor, and Senior Fellow

Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI)

"The authors have organized and written a timely and necessary book on the care of the acute psychiatric patient in the Emergency Department.

Over 2 million people a year seek care for behavioral health care problems in hospital EDs at a cost of over $4 billion.

Behavioral health patients seeking care in the emergency department have the same hopes, needs, and fears as the rest of the patients who present to our EDs for evaluation and treatment.

The ED is often an intense and stressful work environment where staff must perform rapid assessments and make swift treatment decisions.

ED staff and team members, dedicated, focused, and highly trained, too often feel overwhelmed, burdened and at times even threatened by the need to provide care for behavioral health patients.

There is a great deal of variation in ED expertise, training and resource allocation for emergency mental health problems, which can lead to sub-optimal care and negative patient and staff experiences.

The management of acute behavioral emergencies and crisis intervention are simply and clearly described in this book. The tactics, tools and techniques outlined here can elevate our approach to emergency department psychiatry and allow our emergency medicine colleagues to rise above our current challenges and frustrations.

Balan et al. apply approaches, lessons and insights from both evidence - based medicine and Lean service operations to behavioral health patients, defining best practices and demonstrating the benefits and positive impact on patient care, flow and safety.

Big Book of Emergency Department Psychiatry is a practical playbook for the challenges at hand. The authors explain simply and clearly how to get it done."

Kirk Jensen, MD, MBA, FACEP

Chief Innovation Officer, EmCare, Inc.

Chief Medical Officer, BestPractices, Inc.

Studer Faculty Member and National Speaker

Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI) Faculty Member

"The management of psychiatric patients seeking care in the emergency department is one of the most complex and important issues in modern emergency medicine. The patients are frequently disenfranchised and do not receive high quality or timely medical care. As a result, these patients impose a tremendous impact on ED resources and flow.

This book provides comprehensive insights into psychiatric care in the ED and operational improvement using Lean Healthcare concepts. It will help you and your leadership team create a patient-centric culture where a community of scientists continuously improve value for psychiatric patients, hospital and society."

Jody Crane, MD, MBA

Principal, X32 Healthcare

Author of "The Definitive Guide to Emergency Department Operational Improvement: Employing Lean Principles with Current ED Best Practices to Create the "No Wait" Department"

"Innovative, informative and inspiring book, with captivating stories that display the ins and outs of psychiatric emergency services. A must read, especially the chapters on correctional emergency psychiatry and the concept of Lean in healthcare."

Mardoche Sidor, MD

Assistant Professor of Psychiatry, Columbia University

Medical Director

The Center for Alternative Sentencing and Employment Services (CASES)

"Big Book of Emergency Department Psychiatry is big as it should be; it is the most comprehensive text on emergency psychiatry in print. Not only does it guide one to the diagnosis and management of emergency room patients but it also addresses operational issues in various settings. The emergency room is a team effort and Big Book of Emergency Department Psychiatry includes the perspectives of its members: psychiatrist, nurse, social worker and non-psychiatric emergency doctor.

Make room for it on your bookshelf."

David W Preven, MD

Clinical Professor

Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

"Complete, accurate and especially timely. A must read for any emergency department leader engaged in improving care for this vulnerable population."

Seth Thomas, MD, FACEP

Director of Quality & Performance

CEP America

"Big Book of Emergency Department Psychiatry is empathically written and valuable to anyone that has ever experienced or cared for someone dealing with a psychiatric emergency. It has a dose of rigor, evidence and science and it conveys the personal experience of some of our peers and it keeps you wanting to read more. It is a tremendous compendium of the state of knowledge of the specialty and art of emergency psychiatry.

Very soon, this book will become the must-read for this specialty for trainees and experienced mental health professionals alike.
I congratulate the authors on an excellent, disciplined, rigorous work that retains the human perspective while educating the reader."

Carlos Rueda MD, MBA
Chairman, Department of Psychiatry
St. Joseph’s Healthcare System
Trinitas Regional Medical Center



Table of Contents

Chapter 1: Introduction to Emergency Psychiatry

Chapter 2: Introduction to Lean Methodology

Chapter 3: Queuing Theory and the Impact of the Long Stay Patient

Chapter 4: Change Management and Cultural Barriers

Chapter 5: Metrics for Improvement

Chapter 6: Common Psychiatric Disorders in Emergency Department Settings

Chapter 7: Children and Adolescents with Psychiatric Emergencies

Chapter 8: Medical Problems Presenting as Psychiatric Complaints

Chapter 9: The Diagnosis and Management of Substance Use Disorders in Emergency Psychiatry

Chapter 10: Active Treatment Options used in Psychiatric Emergencies

Chapter 11: The Myths of Medical Clearance

Chapter 12: Treatment Teams and Operational Principles in the Emergency Department

Chapter 13: Emergency Psychiatry from an ED Physician Perspective

Chapter 14: Emergency Psychiatry from an ED Nurse Perspective

Chapter 15: Emergency Psychiatry from a Psychiatrist perspective

Chapter 16: Emergency Psychiatry from an ED Social Worker Perspective

Chapter 17: Emergency Treatment of Agitation in Delirious and Demented Patients

Chapter 18: Risk Assessment

Chapter 19: Discharge Planning

Chapter 20: Innovations in Treatment of Psychiatric Emergencies in a Hospital Setting

Chapter 21: Correctional Emergency Psychiatry

Chapter 22: Ethical Implications for the Psychiatrist in the ED

Big Book of Emergency Department Psychiatry

Product form

£65.54

Includes FREE delivery

RRP £68.99 – you save £3.45 (5%)

Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Mon 18 May 2026.

A Paperback by Christopher Bryant Lentz, Karen Murrell, Christopher Bryant Lentz

15 in stock


    View other formats and editions of Big Book of Emergency Department Psychiatry by Christopher Bryant Lentz

    Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
    Publication Date: 1/19/2017 12:09:00 AM
    ISBN13: 9781138198074, 978-1138198074
    ISBN10: 1138198072

    Description

    Book Synopsis

    This book focuses on the operational and clinical strategies needed to improve care of Emergency Psychiatric patients. Boarding of psychiatric patients in ED's is recognized as a national crisis. The American College of Emergency Physicians identified strategies to decrease boarding of psychiatric patients as one of their top strategic goals.

    Currently, there are books on clinical care of psychiatric patients, but this is the first book that looks at both the clinical and operational aspects of caring for these patients in ED setting. This book discusses Lean methodology, the impact of long stay patients using queuing methodology, clinical guidelines and active treatment of psychiatric patients in the ED.



    Trade Review

    "All clinicians in Emergency Departments espouse to provide care for the whole person, yet those individuals with psychiatric and mental health conditions in EDs all too often find timely and competent care woefully lacking.

    Similar to the recent trends of integrating mental health services into primary care, this book provides expertise and practical guidance for ED physicians and nurses to increase competencies for diagnosing and treating common mental health conditions.

    This innovative model of care in EDs proactively and reliably addresses the majority of patients’ psychiatric and mental health needs, and reserves psychiatric consultation services and transfers to psychiatric treatment facilities for those patients who cannot be adequately treated by ED clinicians."

    Patricia Rutherford, RN, MS

    Vice President

    Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI)

    "The authors not only have a deep understanding of emergency psychiatry but also of operational improvement. The mix makes this book a needed reference for anyone focused on a patient centered approach for this vulnerable population."

    Kevin Nolan, Statistician, Improvement Advisor, and Senior Fellow

    Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI)

    "The authors have organized and written a timely and necessary book on the care of the acute psychiatric patient in the Emergency Department.

    Over 2 million people a year seek care for behavioral health care problems in hospital EDs at a cost of over $4 billion.

    Behavioral health patients seeking care in the emergency department have the same hopes, needs, and fears as the rest of the patients who present to our EDs for evaluation and treatment.

    The ED is often an intense and stressful work environment where staff must perform rapid assessments and make swift treatment decisions.

    ED staff and team members, dedicated, focused, and highly trained, too often feel overwhelmed, burdened and at times even threatened by the need to provide care for behavioral health patients.

    There is a great deal of variation in ED expertise, training and resource allocation for emergency mental health problems, which can lead to sub-optimal care and negative patient and staff experiences.

    The management of acute behavioral emergencies and crisis intervention are simply and clearly described in this book. The tactics, tools and techniques outlined here can elevate our approach to emergency department psychiatry and allow our emergency medicine colleagues to rise above our current challenges and frustrations.

    Balan et al. apply approaches, lessons and insights from both evidence - based medicine and Lean service operations to behavioral health patients, defining best practices and demonstrating the benefits and positive impact on patient care, flow and safety.

    Big Book of Emergency Department Psychiatry is a practical playbook for the challenges at hand. The authors explain simply and clearly how to get it done."

    Kirk Jensen, MD, MBA, FACEP

    Chief Innovation Officer, EmCare, Inc.

    Chief Medical Officer, BestPractices, Inc.

    Studer Faculty Member and National Speaker

    Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI) Faculty Member

    "The management of psychiatric patients seeking care in the emergency department is one of the most complex and important issues in modern emergency medicine. The patients are frequently disenfranchised and do not receive high quality or timely medical care. As a result, these patients impose a tremendous impact on ED resources and flow.

    This book provides comprehensive insights into psychiatric care in the ED and operational improvement using Lean Healthcare concepts. It will help you and your leadership team create a patient-centric culture where a community of scientists continuously improve value for psychiatric patients, hospital and society."

    Jody Crane, MD, MBA

    Principal, X32 Healthcare

    Author of "The Definitive Guide to Emergency Department Operational Improvement: Employing Lean Principles with Current ED Best Practices to Create the "No Wait" Department"

    "Innovative, informative and inspiring book, with captivating stories that display the ins and outs of psychiatric emergency services. A must read, especially the chapters on correctional emergency psychiatry and the concept of Lean in healthcare."

    Mardoche Sidor, MD

    Assistant Professor of Psychiatry, Columbia University

    Medical Director

    The Center for Alternative Sentencing and Employment Services (CASES)

    "Big Book of Emergency Department Psychiatry is big as it should be; it is the most comprehensive text on emergency psychiatry in print. Not only does it guide one to the diagnosis and management of emergency room patients but it also addresses operational issues in various settings. The emergency room is a team effort and Big Book of Emergency Department Psychiatry includes the perspectives of its members: psychiatrist, nurse, social worker and non-psychiatric emergency doctor.

    Make room for it on your bookshelf."

    David W Preven, MD

    Clinical Professor

    Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior

    Albert Einstein College of Medicine

    "Complete, accurate and especially timely. A must read for any emergency department leader engaged in improving care for this vulnerable population."

    Seth Thomas, MD, FACEP

    Director of Quality & Performance

    CEP America

    "Big Book of Emergency Department Psychiatry is empathically written and valuable to anyone that has ever experienced or cared for someone dealing with a psychiatric emergency. It has a dose of rigor, evidence and science and it conveys the personal experience of some of our peers and it keeps you wanting to read more. It is a tremendous compendium of the state of knowledge of the specialty and art of emergency psychiatry.

    Very soon, this book will become the must-read for this specialty for trainees and experienced mental health professionals alike.
    I congratulate the authors on an excellent, disciplined, rigorous work that retains the human perspective while educating the reader."

    Carlos Rueda MD, MBA
    Chairman, Department of Psychiatry
    St. Joseph’s Healthcare System
    Trinitas Regional Medical Center


    "All clinicians in Emergency Departments espouse to provide care for the whole person, yet those individuals with psychiatric and mental health conditions in EDs all too often find timely and competent care woefully lacking.

    Similar to the recent trends of integrating mental health services into primary care, this book provides expertise and practical guidance for ED physicians and nurses to increase competencies for diagnosing and treating common mental health conditions.

    This innovative model of care in EDs proactively and reliably addresses the majority of patients’ psychiatric and mental health needs, and reserves psychiatric consultation services and transfers to psychiatric treatment facilities for those patients who cannot be adequately treated by ED clinicians."

    Patricia Rutherford, RN, MS

    Vice President

    Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI)

    "The authors not only have a deep understanding of emergency psychiatry but also of operational improvement. The mix makes this book a needed reference for anyone focused on a patient centered approach for this vulnerable population."

    Kevin Nolan, Statistician, Improvement Advisor, and Senior Fellow

    Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI)

    "The authors have organized and written a timely and necessary book on the care of the acute psychiatric patient in the Emergency Department.

    Over 2 million people a year seek care for behavioral health care problems in hospital EDs at a cost of over $4 billion.

    Behavioral health patients seeking care in the emergency department have the same hopes, needs, and fears as the rest of the patients who present to our EDs for evaluation and treatment.

    The ED is often an intense and stressful work environment where staff must perform rapid assessments and make swift treatment decisions.

    ED staff and team members, dedicated, focused, and highly trained, too often feel overwhelmed, burdened and at times even threatened by the need to provide care for behavioral health patients.

    There is a great deal of variation in ED expertise, training and resource allocation for emergency mental health problems, which can lead to sub-optimal care and negative patient and staff experiences.

    The management of acute behavioral emergencies and crisis intervention are simply and clearly described in this book. The tactics, tools and techniques outlined here can elevate our approach to emergency department psychiatry and allow our emergency medicine colleagues to rise above our current challenges and frustrations.

    Balan et al. apply approaches, lessons and insights from both evidence - based medicine and Lean service operations to behavioral health patients, defining best practices and demonstrating the benefits and positive impact on patient care, flow and safety.

    Big Book of Emergency Department Psychiatry is a practical playbook for the challenges at hand. The authors explain simply and clearly how to get it done."

    Kirk Jensen, MD, MBA, FACEP

    Chief Innovation Officer, EmCare, Inc.

    Chief Medical Officer, BestPractices, Inc.

    Studer Faculty Member and National Speaker

    Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI) Faculty Member

    "The management of psychiatric patients seeking care in the emergency department is one of the most complex and important issues in modern emergency medicine. The patients are frequently disenfranchised and do not receive high quality or timely medical care. As a result, these patients impose a tremendous impact on ED resources and flow.

    This book provides comprehensive insights into psychiatric care in the ED and operational improvement using Lean Healthcare concepts. It will help you and your leadership team create a patient-centric culture where a community of scientists continuously improve value for psychiatric patients, hospital and society."

    Jody Crane, MD, MBA

    Principal, X32 Healthcare

    Author of "The Definitive Guide to Emergency Department Operational Improvement: Employing Lean Principles with Current ED Best Practices to Create the "No Wait" Department"

    "Innovative, informative and inspiring book, with captivating stories that display the ins and outs of psychiatric emergency services. A must read, especially the chapters on correctional emergency psychiatry and the concept of Lean in healthcare."

    Mardoche Sidor, MD

    Assistant Professor of Psychiatry, Columbia University

    Medical Director

    The Center for Alternative Sentencing and Employment Services (CASES)

    "Big Book of Emergency Department Psychiatry is big as it should be; it is the most comprehensive text on emergency psychiatry in print. Not only does it guide one to the diagnosis and management of emergency room patients but it also addresses operational issues in various settings. The emergency room is a team effort and Big Book of Emergency Department Psychiatry includes the perspectives of its members: psychiatrist, nurse, social worker and non-psychiatric emergency doctor.

    Make room for it on your bookshelf."

    David W Preven, MD

    Clinical Professor

    Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior

    Albert Einstein College of Medicine

    "Complete, accurate and especially timely. A must read for any emergency department leader engaged in improving care for this vulnerable population."

    Seth Thomas, MD, FACEP

    Director of Quality & Performance

    CEP America

    "Big Book of Emergency Department Psychiatry is empathically written and valuable to anyone that has ever experienced or cared for someone dealing with a psychiatric emergency. It has a dose of rigor, evidence and science and it conveys the personal experience of some of our peers and it keeps you wanting to read more. It is a tremendous compendium of the state of knowledge of the specialty and art of emergency psychiatry.

    Very soon, this book will become the must-read for this specialty for trainees and experienced mental health professionals alike.
    I congratulate the authors on an excellent, disciplined, rigorous work that retains the human perspective while educating the reader."

    Carlos Rueda MD, MBA
    Chairman, Department of Psychiatry
    St. Joseph’s Healthcare System
    Trinitas Regional Medical Center



    Table of Contents

    Chapter 1: Introduction to Emergency Psychiatry

    Chapter 2: Introduction to Lean Methodology

    Chapter 3: Queuing Theory and the Impact of the Long Stay Patient

    Chapter 4: Change Management and Cultural Barriers

    Chapter 5: Metrics for Improvement

    Chapter 6: Common Psychiatric Disorders in Emergency Department Settings

    Chapter 7: Children and Adolescents with Psychiatric Emergencies

    Chapter 8: Medical Problems Presenting as Psychiatric Complaints

    Chapter 9: The Diagnosis and Management of Substance Use Disorders in Emergency Psychiatry

    Chapter 10: Active Treatment Options used in Psychiatric Emergencies

    Chapter 11: The Myths of Medical Clearance

    Chapter 12: Treatment Teams and Operational Principles in the Emergency Department

    Chapter 13: Emergency Psychiatry from an ED Physician Perspective

    Chapter 14: Emergency Psychiatry from an ED Nurse Perspective

    Chapter 15: Emergency Psychiatry from a Psychiatrist perspective

    Chapter 16: Emergency Psychiatry from an ED Social Worker Perspective

    Chapter 17: Emergency Treatment of Agitation in Delirious and Demented Patients

    Chapter 18: Risk Assessment

    Chapter 19: Discharge Planning

    Chapter 20: Innovations in Treatment of Psychiatric Emergencies in a Hospital Setting

    Chapter 21: Correctional Emergency Psychiatry

    Chapter 22: Ethical Implications for the Psychiatrist in the ED

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