A Contact-Based Intervention for People Recently Discharged from Inpatient Psychiatric Care: A Pilot Study
Autor: | Olive Bennewith, S O'Connor, Keith Hawton, Rosemary Davies, Jenny L Donovan, Navneet Kapur, Jonathan Evans, Amanda Owen-Smith, William Hollingworth, David Gunnell, Sangeetha Paramasivan |
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Rok vydání: | 2014 |
Předmět: |
Adult
Male Suicide Prevention medicine.medical_specialty Adolescent Substance-Related Disorders Aftercare Pilot Projects Personality Disorders Young Adult Intervention (counseling) Humans Medicine Psychiatry Aged Mood Disorders business.industry Mental Disorders Middle Aged After discharge medicine.disease Correspondence as Topic Patient Discharge Hospitalization Psychiatry and Mental health Clinical Psychology England Schizophrenia Feasibility Studies Female Medical emergency business |
Zdroj: | Archives of Suicide Research. 18:131-143 |
ISSN: | 1543-6136 1381-1118 |
DOI: | 10.1080/13811118.2013.838196 |
Popis: | People recently discharged from inpatient psychiatric care are at high risk of suicide and self-harm, with 6% of all suicides in England occurring in the 3 months after discharge. There is some evidence from a randomized trial carried out in the United States in the 1960s-70s that supportive letters sent by psychiatrists to high-risk patients in the period following hospital discharge resulted in a reduction in suicide. The aim of the current pilot study was to assess the feasibility of conducting a similar trial, but in a broader group of psychiatric discharges, in the context of present day UK clinical practice. The intervention was piloted on 3 psychiatric inpatient wards in southwest England. On 2 wards a series of 8 letters were sent to patients over the 12 months after discharge and 6 letters were sent from the third ward over a 6 month period. A total of 102 patients discharged from the wards received at least 1 letter, but only 45 (44.1%) received the full series of letters. The main reasons for drop-out were patient opt-out (n = 24) or readmission (n = 26). In the context of a policy of intensive follow-up post-discharge, qualitative interviews with service users showed that most already felt adequately supported and the intervention added little to this. Those interviewed felt that it was possible that the intervention might benefit people new to or with little follow-up from mental health services but that fewer letters should be mailed. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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