1. Virtual monitoring of suicide risk in the general hospital and emergency department
- Author
-
Jennifer Karno, Laurie J. Falaro, Jennifer A. Cartright, Shelley Hurwitz, Molly O'Reilly, Christine A. Murphy, Escel Stanghellini, Janet M. Gorman, Adam C. Schaffer, Linda Delaporta, David S. Kroll, Colin Murphy, Anna T. Meyer, Stephanie L. DesRoches, Charles Lydon, Sejal B. Shah, Patricia Aylward, Barbara E. Lakatos, Daniel J. Pallin, Deborah F. Mulloy, Elizabeth J. McGrath, David Gitlin, Allison C. Webster, Michael S. Kristan, and Monique T. Mitchell
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Suicide Prevention ,Adolescent ,Attitude of Health Personnel ,Observation ,Nursing Staff, Hospital ,Impulsivity ,Hospitals, General ,Risk Assessment ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Intervention (counseling) ,Patient Observation ,Medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Adverse effect ,Retrospective Studies ,Protocol (science) ,Response rate (survey) ,business.industry ,Emergency department ,medicine.disease ,Confidence interval ,030227 psychiatry ,Hospitalization ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Female ,Medical emergency ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Emergency Service, Hospital - Abstract
Objective To determine whether continuous virtual monitoring, an intervention that facilitates patient observation through video technology, can be used to monitor suicide risk in the general hospital and emergency department (ED). Method This was a retrospective analysis of a protocol in which select patients on suicide precautions in the general hospital and ED received virtual monitoring between June 2017 and March 2018. The primary outcome was the number of adverse events among patients who received virtual monitoring for suicide risk. Secondary outcomes were the percentage of patients for whom virtual monitoring was discontinued for behavioral reasons and the preference for observation type among nurses. Results 39 patients on suicide precautions received virtual monitoring. There were 0 adverse events (95% confidence interval (CI) = 0.000–0.090). Virtual monitoring was discontinued for behavioral reasons in 4/38 cases for which the reason for terminating was recorded (0.105, 95%CI = 0.029–0.248). We were unable to draw conclusions regarding preference for observation type among nurses due to a low response rate to our survey. Conclusions Suicide risk can feasibly be monitored virtually in the general hospital or ED when their providers carefully select patients for low impulsivity risk.
- Published
- 2018