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Journal Article

Citation

Owens D, Dennis M, Read S, Davis N. Br. J. Psychiatry 1994; 165(6): 797-801.

Affiliation

Division of Psychiatry and Behavioural Sciences, University of Leeds.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1994, Royal College of Psychiatry)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

7881782

Abstract

BACKGROUND: One of the most important outcomes following an episode of non-fatal deliberate self-poisoning is its repetition. METHOD: In a prospective follow-up study the subjects were 992 people responsible for 1096 consecutive episodes of deliberate self-poisoning recorded at a teaching hospital accident and emergency department. Risk factors examined were socio-demographic variables, psychiatric and self-harm history, aspects of the self-poisoning episode, and appearance and behaviour at accident and emergency; the frequency of each was compared between those patients who repeated within one year (n = 116) and those who did not (n = 876). RESULTS: Those who repeated were more likely to have ingested more than one drug, to report a previous episode of self-poisoning, to be aged 25-54, and to have experienced previous psychiatric care or psychiatric admission. They were less likely to be in paid employment, or to have expressed a threat to another person or written a note. The best predictor--previous psychiatric contact--only had a positive predictive value of 21% (95% confidence interval 16-25%). CONCLUSIONS: Risk factors for repetition of self-poisoning should be kept up-to-date despite modest predictive power. More attention might be paid to clinical rather than socio-demographic aspects of self-harm.


Language: en

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