Title of article :
Variations in time of hospital presentation for deliberate self-harm and their implications for clinical services
Author/Authors :
Bergen، نويسنده , , Helen and Hawton، نويسنده , , Keith، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Abstract :
Background
ion in number, characteristics and management of deliberate self-harm (DSH) patients presenting to hospital during the 24-h cycle and day of the week may have implications for patient services. We have investigated how patient characteristics and clinical management of DSH episodes vary according to hour and day of presentation.
s
f presentation was studied in 5348 DSH patients who presented to a general hospital following 9101 episodes during a 6-year period. Patient characteristics were identified through routine clinical monitoring.
s
tations varied markedly during the 24-h cycle, ranging from a peak between 8 pm and 3 am (average hourly rate of 6.6% of all episodes) to a low between 4 am and 10 am (1.4%). The majority (72.0%) occurred outside office hours. DSH associated with alcohol use and interpersonal problems was more frequent during the late evening or night, and at the weekend. A greater proportion of daytime presentations involved high suicide intent (although a larger number of high intent acts presented at other times), and more were admitted and assessed.
tions
tudy was based on DSH presentations to one hospital. Time and date of presentation and of psychosocial assessment, not time of DSH, were available for analysis.
sions
imes for DSH presentations are at night and the weekend, suggesting that specialist DSH services in general hospitals should be available 24 h a day, 7 days a week. Time of presentation should not be used as a proxy measure of suicide intent.
Keywords :
Deliberate self-harm , Service provision , SUICIDE , diurnal variation
Journal title :
Journal of Affective Disorders
Journal title :
Journal of Affective Disorders