In the CDR, we divide acute care into wards with lower and higher levels of supervision.
Those wards that treat patients with more severe mental health problems, who therefore need higher supervision, put patient safety first and are designed to minimise the risk of any danger. The programme includes individual and, above all, group therapeutic activities. These include urgent hospital admissions such as acute psychotic conditions, severe depressive difficulties, manic states, acute substance abuse conditions, conditions following suicide attempts and other urgent problems.
Lower level wards are for patients who are already able to engage in an intensive therapeutic programme. This consists mainly of group psychotherapy and complementary therapies, including music therapy, art therapy and drama therapy. Other possible therapeutic methods include advanced neurostimulation techniques using low-intensity direct current stimulation (tDCS) and magnetic current stimulation (rTMS). The structure of the entire therapeutic programme is based on the work of the leading Czech psychiatrist Prof. Ján Praško Pavlov, M.D., Csc.
The main goal of this type of acute care is the basic stabilization of the mental state of patients, and education regarding their further treatment. We try to tailor the treatment plan to each patient to best reflect the specifics and severity of their mental health problems.