%0 Journal Article %T A comparison of olanzapine and risperidone on the risk of psychiatric hospitalization in the naturalistic treatment of patients with schizophrenia %A Haya Ascher-Svanum %A Baojin Zhu %A Douglas Faries %A Frank R Ernst %J Annals of General Psychiatry %D 2004 %I BioMed Central %R 10.1186/1475-2832-3-11 %X We examined data of patients newly initiated on olanzapine (N = 159) or risperidone (N = 112) who continued on the index antipsychotic for at least one year following initiation. Patients were participants in a 3-year prospective, observational study of schizophrenia patients in the US. Outcome measures were percent of hospitalized patients, total days hospitalized per patient, and time to first hospitalization during the one-year post initiation. Analyses employed a generalized linear model with adjustments for demographic and clinical variables. A two-part model was used to confirm the findings. Time to hospitalization was measured by the Kaplan-Meier survival formula.Compared to risperidone, olanzapine-treated patients had significantly lower hospitalization rates, (24.1% vs. 14.4%, respectively, p = 0.040) and significantly fewer hospitalization days (14.5 days vs. 9.9 days, respectively, p = 0.035). The mean difference of 4.6 days translated to $2,502 in annual psychiatric hospitalization cost savings per olanzapine-treated patient, on average.Consistent with prior clinical trial research, treatment-adherent schizophrenia patients who were treated in usual care with olanzapine had a lower risk of psychiatric hospitalization than risperidone-treated patients. Lower hospitalization costs appear to more than offset the higher medication acquisition cost of olanzapine.Schizophrenia is a severe and persistent mental illness in which most patients alternate between acute psychotic episodes and stable periods [1]. This chronic and recurrent illness is associated with cognitive, behavioral, social, and occupational impairments that often require a variety of costly therapeutic options [2]. Psychiatric hospitalization is the most restrictive therapeutic alternative for these patients and is often reserved for individuals who are gravely ill and/or are dangerous to themselves or others. Psychiatric hospitalization is a costly treatment alternative in terms of personal an %U http://www.annals-general-psychiatry.com/content/3/1/11