TY - JOUR
PY - 2015//
TI - Suicide attempts and emergency room psychiatric consultation
JO - BMC psychiatry
A1 - Zeppegno, Patrizia
A1 - Gramaglia, Carla
A1 - Castello, Luigi
A1 - Bert, Fabrizio
A1 - Gualano, Maria
A1 - Ressico, Francesca
A1 - Coppola, Isabella
A1 - Avanzi, Gian
A1 - Siliquini, Roberta
A1 - Torre, Eugenio
SP - 13
EP - 13
VL - 15
IS -
N2 - Suicidal behaviours are major public health concerns worldwide. They are associated with risk factors that vary with age and gender, occur in combination, and may change over time. The aim of our study was to investigate how frequently patients visiting a hospital emergency room (ER) require a psychiatric consultation for attempted suicide, and to outline the characteristics of this population.
METHODS Determinants of emergency room visits for psychiatric reasons were studied prospectively from 2008 to 2011 at the ¿Maggiore¿ Hospital in Novara.
RESULTS 280 out of 1888 patients requiring psychiatric consultation were referred to the ER because of suicide attempt. Suicide attempters were more often female. The rate of suicide attempters among Italian people was 14.2%, compared to 19.5% in foreigners. Subjects living with parents or own family and those having a permanent job had a higher frequency of suicide attempt. Suicide attempts were more frequent among patients with a history of psychiatric disorders; nonetheless, suicide attempts were more common among those who had not previously been hospitalized in a psychiatric ward or were not under the care of a psychiatrist. The multivariate analysis found that female gender was a risk factor for suicide attempt, while being in the colder months of the year and, surprisingly, unemployment were protective factors.
CONCLUSIONS A better understanding of patients referring to the ER due to attempted suicide may allow the identification of at-risk subjects and the implementation of targeted treatment approaches.
Language: en
LA - en SN - 1471-244X UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12888-015-0392-2 ID - ref1 ER -