- Marked decline in age at admission for major depressive and bipolar disorders between 2006 and 2022, approximately 13.6 and 6.1 years respectively.
- Sex-specific effects: decline in depression driven by men (≈21.8 years), bipolar decline driven by women (≈9.5 years) over 2006-2022.
- Rejuvenation limited to voluntary admissions and affective disorders; compulsory admissions, schizophrenia spectrum, and substance use disorder admissions remained age-stable.
Ann Gen Psychiatry. 2026 May 31. doi: 10.1186/s12991-026-00681-2. Online ahead of print.
ABSTRACT
AIMS: Following Italy’s psychiatric reform, national inpatient numbers declined, but how the age at admission has changed across sex, diagnostic, and admission-type subgroups remains unclear. This study examined 17 consecutive years (2006-2022) of psychiatric admissions to the sole ward serving L’Aquila, assessing temporal trends in age at admission by diagnosis, sex, and admission status (voluntary vs. compulsory).
METHODS: All adult admissions (≥ 18 years) were extracted from hospital discharge records (Schede di Dimissione Ospedaliera, SDO). Analyses were conducted at the admission-episode level. Primary diagnoses were grouped into four ICD-9 categories: schizophrenia spectrum, major depressive disorder, bipolar disorder, and alcohol/substance use disorder. Multiple linear models tested time-related changes in mean age at admission, including interactions for time × diagnosis × sex × admission type.
RESULTS: Across 5,207 admission episodes, the Trimester × Diagnosis interaction showed a marked decline in age at admission for major depression (B = – 0.20 per trimester, p < 0.001) and bipolar disorder (B = – 0.09, p = 0.03), equivalent to approximately – 0.80 and – 0.36 years per year, yielding total reductions of ~ 13.6 and ~ 6.1 years over 2006-2022. The Trimester × Diagnosis × Sex interaction indicated that the decline in depression was driven by men (B = – 0.32, p < 0.001; ≈ -1.28 years/year; -21.76 over 17 years), while in bipolar disorder it was driven by women (B = – 0.14, p = 0.03; ≈ -0.56 years/year; -9.52 over 17 years). The Trimester × Admission type interaction showed the reduction was specific to voluntary admissions (B = – 0.10, p < 0.001; ≈ -0.40 years/year), while compulsory admissions were stable (B = – 0.01, p = 0.87). No significant age change occurred in schizophrenia spectrum disorders or in alcohol/substance use disorders.
CONCLUSIONS: Between 2006 and 2022, we observed a progressive rejuvenation of voluntary and affective-disorder inpatient admissions, with the clearest subgroup-specific reductions detected in men with major depression and women with bipolar disorder, while remaining stable in schizophrenia spectrum, alcohol/substance use disorder, and compulsory admissions. These findings underscore the need to balance youth-focused outreach with adequate capacity for chronic psychosis and substance use disorder.
PMID:42219509 | DOI:10.1186/s12991-026-00681-2
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