4.2 Article

Police departments and care continuity for autistic youth in suicidal crisis

Publisher

EMERALD GROUP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1108/PIJPSM-10-2021-0150

Keywords

Mental health; Social networks; Autism spectrum disorder; Multi-systems; Policing coordination

Funding

  1. Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) [SM082107]

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The study aims to develop and test a county-level social network measure of care coordination between police departments and other support systems for autistic youth in crisis. The findings show that about half of the surveyed police departments coordinate care for autistic youth in suicidal crisis, and the coordination varies by county. Two different structural configurations were identified. Further research is needed to examine how different police integration structures shape care coordination for autistic youth.
Purpose Autistic youth face higher risks for experiencing mental health crises. To develop and test a county-level social network measure of care coordination between police departments and other systems that support autistic youth experiencing suicidal crisis. Design/methodology/approach To measure the structure of care coordination for autistic youth experiencing suicidal crisis, the authors created a roster of all police departments and youth servicing organizations in two East Coast counties in the United States. They met or exceeded the whole network recruitment threshold of 70% completion in both counties. From the data, the authors created a directed matrix for each county of all reported connections, which they used to create sociograms and calculate standard network measures, including indegree, outdegree and total degree for each organization in the network. Data management and processing were done using R-programming and ORA. Findings Social network findings indicated that about half of all police departments surveyed coordinate care for autistic youth in suicidal crisis. Coordination varied by county, with nonpolice organizations acting as connectors between police and other nonpolice organizations. Two structural configurations were found, including a nonpolice organizational hub structure and a lead police structure. More research is needed to determine how different police integration structures shape care coordination for autistic youth. Research limitations/implications Limitations include the small number of counties included in the study. A larger sample of counties is required for generalizable results. Practical implications This article introduces new tools and approaches to assist police in building their capacity to measure and improve their coordination of care with other community systems during crisis situations for youth on the autism spectrum. Network science (e.g. matrix and graph theoretic algebra methods) can be used to measure the configuration of relationships police departments have with complex multi-level healthcare systems. Social implications Implications for findings include the consideration of police integration across systems in ways that produce new collaboration possibilities to support autistic youth experiencing suicidal crisis. Originality/value While police departments play a critical role in coordinating care for youth in suicidal crisis, little is known if or how police departments collaborate with other systems to provide assistance for autistic youth during a suicidal crisis. Improving care continuity within and between systems could potentially address clinical and structural challenges and reduce risk for autistic youth experiencing a suicidal crisis.

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