Loading...
Please wait, while we are loading the content...
The epidemiology and management of self-harm amongst adults in england.
| Content Provider | CiteSeerX |
|---|---|
| Author | Gunnell, David Bennewith, Olive Peters, Tim J. House, Allan Hawton, Keith |
| Abstract | Background Previous research into the epidemiology and management of self-harm has been largely based in centres with a special interest in this behaviour or focused on hospital admissions only. There are no national data on the characteristics and management of people presenting to hospital following self-harm. Methods Data were collected from 8-week service audits carried out in a stratified random sample of 31 general hospitals in England. Results 4033 episodes of self-harm resulting in presentation to Accident and Emergency Departments were identified. Overdose alone accounted for 79 per cent of episodes, 80 per cent of presentations were outside normal office hours (9 am – 5 pm, Monday to Friday) and the peak period of attendance was from 8 pm to 2am. In only 56 per cent of epi-sodes was a specialist psychosocial assessment conducted prior to discharge and less than half (46 per cent) led to admission to a hospital bed. Psychiatric admission occurred in 10 per cent. Episodes involving older subjects (>45 years) and those using methods other than laceration or overdose were the most likely to lead to assessment and admission. Conclusions Non-fatal self-harm is one of the strongest predictors of suicide, yet nearly half of all hospital attend-ances in England following self-harm do not lead to a spe-cialist assessment. Patterns of service provision should take account of the observation that most self-harm attendances occur outside normal working hours and those at greatest risk of repetition are the least likely to receive assessments. |
| File Format | |
| Access Restriction | Open |
| Subject Keyword | Self-harm Amongst Adult Hospital Bed Self-harm Attendance Peak Period Hospital Attend-ances Normal Working Hour Spe-cialist Assessment National Data General Hospital Method Data 8-week Service Audit Psychiatric Admission Special Interest Background Previous Research Stratified Random Sample Emergency Department Specialist Psychosocial Assessment Outside Normal Office Hour Conclusion Non-fatal Self-harm Hospital Admission Service Provision |
| Content Type | Text |