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Journal Article

Citation

Baux-Cazal L, Gokalsing E, Amadéo S, Messiah A. Encephale (1974) 2016; 43(3): 273-280.

Vernacular Title

Prévention des conduites suicidaires de l'enfant de moins de 13ans : une revue de la littérature.

Affiliation

Inserm unité 1178 santé mentale et santé publique, équipe impact du psychotraumatisme et du suicide outre-mer (IPSOM), hôpital Paul-Brousse, 94807 Villejuif, France.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2016, Masson Editeur)

DOI

10.1016/j.encep.2016.05.009

PMID

27637872

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Our objective was to review international literature on suicidal behavior prevention for children under age 13.

METHODS: We gathered all relevant articles on suicide prevention for children under 13. We researched all publications in the French and English languages in PubMed (MEDLINE), PsychINFO and SUDOC databases published until February 2014, with the keywords "child", "child preschool", "prevention and control", "suicide", and "suicide attempted". Publications were included if they described suicidal behavior prevention programs (suicide prevention programs, attempted-suicide prevention programs, suicidal ideation screening programs), and if the studies concerned children under age 13. We also included references cited in the articles if they were not already present in our searches but met inclusion criteria. Studies were excluded if they analyzed populations of children and adolescents without sub-analysis for children under age 13.

RESULTS: A total of 350 potentially relevant articles were identified, 33 of which met the inclusion criteria, including 4 retrieved from articles' bibliography. Preventive measures against suicidal behavior for children under 13 exist and include: social programs, maltreatment prevention, curriculum-based suicide prevention programs, suicide screening in schools, gatekeepers, reduction of access of lethal means of suicide, suicide screening by primary care, and post-suicide intervention programs. Overall, the evidence was limited by methodological concerns, particularly a lack of RCTs. However, positive effects were found: school-based suicide prevention programs and gatekeepers increased knowledge about suicide and how to seek help, post-suicide programs helped to reduce psychological distress in the short term. One study showed a decreased risk of attempted-suicide after entry into the child welfare system.

CONCLUSION: There are promising interventions but there is not enough scientific evidence to support any efficient preventive measure against suicidal behavior for children under 13, whether primary, secondary, tertiary or post-intervention. More research is needed.

Copyright © 2016 L'Encéphale, Paris. Published by Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.


Language: fr

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