4.2 Article

Suicide Risk Assessment and Management: Real-World Experience and Perceptions of Emergency Medicine Physicians

Journal

ARCHIVES OF SUICIDE RESEARCH
Volume 21, Issue 3, Pages 365-378

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/13811118.2016.1199987

Keywords

emergency medicine physicians; emergency psychiatry; focus groups; qualitative analysis; self-directed violence; suicide risk assessment

Funding

  1. University of Texas System Patient Safety Committee [150271]

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To examine gaps in effective self-directed violence risk assessments by emergency medicine physicians. Four focus groups (N = 16 physicians) were conducted, followed by thematic analysis. Eight themes were identified in 1,293 coded passages. Participants discussed the practical ways they deal with the challenges of assessing and managing self-directed violence in low-resource settings. Emergency medicine physicians find mechanistic suicide screenings problematic, especially when intervention options are scarce; they find patient rapport, clinical experience, and corroboration from colleagues to be valuable in addressing the complex challenges of suicide risk assessment and management.

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