1. Deliberate self-harm patients who discharge themselves from the general hospital without adequate psychosocial assessment.
- Author
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Crowder R, Van der Putt R, Ashby CA, and Blewett A
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, England epidemiology, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Poisoning epidemiology, Prospective Studies, Psychological Tests, Self-Injurious Behavior epidemiology, Self-Injurious Behavior therapy, Emergency Service, Hospital statistics & numerical data, Patient Discharge statistics & numerical data, Self-Injurious Behavior psychology, Treatment Refusal statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Deliberate self-harm patients who leave the acute hospital environment before the completion of psychiatric assessment have an increased risk of subsequent self-harm. We considered the available data on 50 premature self-discharges identified prospectively in a general hospital with a well-developed integrated-care pathway for self-harm patients, and compared them to a control group. The self-discharge group was found to be more likely to have attempted self-poisoning without alcohol intoxication or other forms or combinations of self-harm, and an absence of identifiable previous self-harm or prior contact with local specialist psychiatric services. The two groups showed no difference in age, sex, or area of residence based on community mental health team sectors. It is proposed that these findings indicate hypotheses for further studies of why people leave the hospital without adequate assessment, and how service design could be improved in order to help them.
- Published
- 2004
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