The Department of Psychiatry is
a multidisciplinary department that provides
secondary and tertiary psychiatric services
for patients throughout Southeastern Ontario.
To meet its obligations, the Department
of Psychiatry has been organized into divisions
along service lines that have been formed
according to demographic characteristics,
such as age, or identifiable epidemiological
populations, with some divisions developed
to support special programs for educational
purposes, or clinics for service delivery.
The divisions, many of which offer both
inpatient and ambulatory care, are Adult
Psychiatry, Child & Adolescent Psychiatry,
Consultation-Liaison, Adult Psychiatric
Rehabilitation, Geriatric Psychiatry, Forensic
Psychiatry and Developmental Disabilities.
The Division of Psychopharmacology is a
virtual Division encompassing the organization
and supervision of clinical trails across
all facilities.
Through the divisional organization, the
Department provides acute and chronic care,
assessments, consultation, and rehabilitation.
Services are housed and provided through
three hospital sites in the Academic Health
Sciences Centre and Ongwanada.
In addition, the Department provides services
through community outreach locations in
Smiths Falls (Rideau Regional Centre and
Open Doors for Children and Youth), Brockville
(Child and Youth Wellness Centre), Belleville
(Geriatric Psychiatric Outreach), Napanee
(Mental Health Centre), and North Frontenac
Township (Frontenac Geriatric Psychiatry
Mental Health Services), and Kingston (Frontenac
Community Mental Health Services and Pathways
for Children and Youth). The catchment area
of the Divisions of Adult Psychiatric Rehabilitation
and Geriatric Psychiatry based at PCCC,
and Developmental Disabilities based at
Ongwanada, covers the counties of Hastings-Prince
Edward, Lennox and Addington, Frontenac,
Leeds and Grenville, and the southern half
of Lanark, that is the whole of South Eastern
Ontario up to Peterborough in the west.
The Forensic Division is also part of the
provincial forensic program and serves as
back up for services to other areas of the
Province. The Department has close relationship
and provides consultation services to Canada
Corrections Services especially at the Regional
Treatment Centre based on the grounds of
the Kingston Penitentiary. Telepsychiatry
initiatives have been introduced.
Highlights of the divisions
The Adult Psychiatry Division of the Department
of Psychiatry provides the Psychiatric Emergency
Service, the Adult Acute In-patient Service
and the Short-term Adult Ambulatory Care
(Out-patient Services). A 34-bed acute care
inpatient unit is currently located at Hotel
Dieu Hospital Closely allied to the
Inpatient Unit is the Psychiatry Emergency
Service located currently at both Hotel
Dieu Hospital (8:00 am - 11:00 pm) and Kingston
General Hospital (24-hour service).
The URGENT CARE CLINIC has been established
to provide very short-term follow-up of
patients seen in the Emergency. This is
a rapid assessment clinic. This clinic has
been building up steadily and has taken
some pressure off the acute care beds. The
Hotel Dieu Hospital Psychiatry Ambulatory
Services are academic programs that focus
on acute and severe mental health problems
including clinics covering Anxiety Disorders,
Eating Disorders, Mood Disorders, General
Psychiatry and Psychosis Prevention and
Treatment (First Episode Psychosis) Program
The Division of Consultation-Liaison Psychiatry
provides a team of professionals that is
responsible for delivering psychiatric services
to the adult patients of KGH and who manifest
psychiatric symptoms. The mission of Consultation-Liaison
Psychiatry is to strengthen and enhance
the quality of patient care at KGH by providing
timely psychiatric consultations for this
group of patients. Although the main focus
is on service provision to KGH inpatients,
there has been recent developments toward
the provision of psychiatric services to
a limited number of ambulatory patients
suffering from specific co-morbid medical
conditions, i.e., HIV, hepatitis-C, cardiac
disorders, neurological disorders, and obstetrics
and gynaecologic conditions.
In addition to the above, the Consultation-Liaison
Psychiatry Team consults with the Geriatric
C-L Psychiatry Team when deemed necessary.
The geriatric psychiatry team may be accessed
only through the KGH-based C-L Psychiatry
Team, not by direct consultation. Because
of the increase of admissions of persons
over 65 years of age and a consequent increase
of number of patients presenting with delirium
symptoms among persons in this age group,
an initiative presently before the administration
of the Hospital is the development of a
Delirium Clinic in cooperation with the
Division of Geriatric Psychiatry at PCCC.
The Division also provides consultative
and treatment services to the Cancer Centre
on matters of psycho-oncology.
The Department of Paediatrics is provided
with a Psychiatric Consultation Service
through the Division of Child and Adolescent
Psychiatry that may be consulted directly,
not via the KGH Psychiatric Consultation-Liaison
Service.
The Child and Adolescent Division presently
based at HDH provides comprehensive psychiatric
services to children and adolescents up
to thier 18th birthday suffering severe
psychiatric disorders. Its services include
community outreach consultation to regional
non-medical childrens mental health centers;
an urgent consultation clinic serving the
HDH/KGH emergency departments, community
physicians and childrens agencies; consultation
to paediatric inpatients at KGH; an in-hospital
classroom-based day treatment program; ambulatory
clinics including child and family forensic
services; and an adolescent inpatient unit.
The inpatient program is designated as serving
the needs of adolescents with psychiatric
disorder from Frontenac/Lennox & Addington,
Leeds & Grenville, Hastings/Prince Edward,
and 50% of Lanark Counties. While the program
mandate and the expertise of the hospital-based
mental health professionals is directed
to the care of adolescents with severe psychiatric
disorder, there is invariably a percentage
of admissions of adolescents with conduct
disorders associated with suicidal ideation
to the unit.
The Urgent Consultation service provides
efficient and timely response to the Emergency
departments of KGH and HDH and to community
physicians and other community mental health
care providers referring children and adolescents
who require urgent risk assessment or who
are thought to require inpatient services.
5 hours/week of psychiatric time are allocated
to this service ensuring that patients are
seen within 24 to 72 hours of referral.
Emergency physicians can book available
times from their own department. While all
on-call psychiatrists can admit to the adolescent
inpatient unit, the introduction of this
service and the close interaction of the
Division with the emergency departments
has resulted in a dramatic decrease in emergency
admissions to the unit.
Some 90% of admissions are planned with
a designated arrival date greatly contributing
to the stability unit and therapeutic milieu.
The inpatient program supported by the urgent
consultation clinic serves the needs of
adolescents with psychiatric disorder from
Frontenac/Lennox & Addington, Leeds
& Grenville, Hastings/Prince Edward,
and 50% of Lanark Counties. It is the only
tertiary care provider of adolescent psychiatric
services in the region between CHEO/ROH
and Lakeridge Health Corporation and is
seen as a place of last resort for adolescent
behaviour of high acuity regardless of etiology.
The Psychiatry Department works collaboratively
with the Department of Family Medicine and
Department of Emergency Medicine to support
the provision of psychiatric care in the
Kingston community. To this end, the Department
also collaborates beyond the field of medicine
through the Crisis Intervention Community
Team and the Family Court Clinic as well
as providing consultative services to all
adult courts and provincial correctional
facilities in South Eastern Ontario.
Research
The Department of Psychiatrys research
activities are broad. An evolving role is
to organize, conduct, and collaborate in
multidisciplinary research with foci in
health services research, psychopharmacological
and epidemiological studies, and clinical
trials. The research component is strong
with 5.9 million dollars in funding for
scholarly activity received in 2003. To
fulfill its role in research, the Department
maintains a discipline-specific database
containing encounter-level patient and treatment
data.
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