
@article{ref1,
title="The impact of rural residence on medically serious medicinal self-poisonings",
journal="General hospital psychiatry",
year="2008",
author="Rhodes, Anne and Bethell, Jennifer and Jaakkimainen, R. Liisa and Thurlow, Julie and Spence, Julie and Links, P. S. and Streiner, D. L.",
volume="30",
number="6",
pages="552-560",
abstract="OBJECTIVE: Suicide rates are often high in rural areas. Despite the strong association between deliberate self-harm (DSH) and suicide, few have studied rural residence and DSH. Self-poisonings dominate DSH hospital presentations. We investigate a previously reported association between rural residence and medical severity (defined as a subsequent medical/surgical inpatient stay) among emergency department presentations for medicinal self-poisoning (SP) to determine whether differences in agents taken, mental health service use or hospital-level resources explain the relationship. METHOD: A cohort of n=16,294 12-64-year olds presenting with SP to hospital emergency departments in Ontario, Canada, in 2001/2002 was linked to their service records over time. RESULTS: The rural-medical severity association was best explained by differences in hospital resources; presenting to hospitals providing inpatient psychiatric services appeared to reduce medical/surgical inpatient stays in favor of psychiatric ones. Among those with a recent psychiatric admission, more intensive ambulatory psychiatric contact may be protective of a psychiatric inpatient stay subsequent to the SP presentation. Compared to nonrural residents, deliberate intent was identified less often in rural residents, particularly males. CONCLUSIONS: The rural-medical severity association was best explained by disparities in the delivery systems serving rural and nonrural residents, important to rural suicide prevention efforts.<p /> <p>Language: en</p>",
language="en",
issn="0163-8343",
doi="10.1016/j.genhosppsych.2008.06.012",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.genhosppsych.2008.06.012"
}