emergency department re-presentations following intentional self-harm

23
ED RE-PRESENTATIONS FOLLOWING INTENTIONAL SELF-HARM Silke Kuehl Dr Kathy Nelson

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Discoveries, surprises and learnings from a research about people that presented to an emergency department with intentional self-harm and then re-presented within one week. Presentation by Silke Kuehl and Dr Kathy Nelson, New Zealand Guidelines Group at the 2009 SPINZ National Symposium: Culture and Suicide Prevention in Aotearoa: http://www.spinz.org.nz/page/108-events-archive+spinz-national-symposium-2009+symposium-coverage

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Page 1: Emergency department re-presentations following intentional self-harm

ED RE-PRESENTATIONS FOLLOWING INTENTIONAL SELF-HARM

Silke Kuehl

Dr Kathy Nelson

Page 2: Emergency department re-presentations following intentional self-harm

Overview Literature Aims & Objectives Methodology Findings Recommendations Conclusion

Page 3: Emergency department re-presentations following intentional self-harm

The Literature Statistics

Risk factors

The young, the old and men

Views…ED staff, patients

Page 4: Emergency department re-presentations following intentional self-harm

Overcrowding

Page 5: Emergency department re-presentations following intentional self-harm

Help from IT expert

Approximately 45,000 ED presentations in 2006

• 1865 people – 1 x ISH • 120 people – 393 presentations• Nearly half 58 re-presented w/in

1/52

Page 6: Emergency department re-presentations following intentional self-harm

Aims & Objectives

Describe factors contributing to people re-presenting

Objectives: Describe demographic and clinical

features Describe and evaluate ED management Identify personal or system reasons

Page 7: Emergency department re-presentations following intentional self-harm

Intentional Self-harm

Definition:

Attempted suicide Suicidal ideation Deliberate self-

harm

Page 8: Emergency department re-presentations following intentional self-harm

Methodology Descriptive research Retrospective review Data extraction tool Variables:

Person Presentation

Inclusion/exclusion

Sent Ethics proposal

Page 9: Emergency department re-presentations following intentional self-harm

After Ethics

Retrieved data Log book Sample:

48 people 73 re-presentations

Analysis: SPSS

Page 10: Emergency department re-presentations following intentional self-harm

Findings

Coding Documentation/Assessments Cultural input Physical/mental health Support people Challenging behaviours Time to re-presentation

Page 11: Emergency department re-presentations following intentional self-harm

Coding

Patients are coded by their presenting complaint, irrespective of the intent

Identifying this population difficult

Previously identified 120 people presented 852 times

Page 12: Emergency department re-presentations following intentional self-harm

Type of ISH

Overdose Burn Laceration Gassing Attempted hanging Ingestion/insertion foreign body Head injury Stabbing self Traffic Jumping from a height

Page 13: Emergency department re-presentations following intentional self-harm

Documentation/Assessment

Location of person often briefly described

Poor documentation of risk assessments

Inadequate triage assessment Patient discharged without ED staff

being aware

Page 14: Emergency department re-presentations following intentional self-harm

Documentation/Assessment

Scenario: Person Y presented to ED with thoughts of killing his neighbour and suicidal thoughts. Y was assessed by the MH team and sent home. He arrived back in ED two days later. The triage nurse’s documentation is ‘Expected by CATT. Appears calm’ and allocated a code 4. CATT was delayed for three hours.

Page 15: Emergency department re-presentations following intentional self-harm

Cultural Input

Maori presented 23% of sample (approx 14.3 % in population)

Nil input of Maori services

Increased risk of suicide if not connected to culture (Coupe, 2002)

Page 16: Emergency department re-presentations following intentional self-harm

Physical/mental health

Scenario: Person X presents with a deep laceration to the hand. It requires plastic surgery. He states he works in a professional occupation and got his hand caught in a grinder by accident. Person X states that he has no past medical history. Previous admission notes showed that he had attended two days previously distressed and suicidal.

Page 17: Emergency department re-presentations following intentional self-harm

Physical/mental health

Ambulatory Care service – ‘quick’

Nil checking of previous presentations

Nil highlighting on the IT system

Page 18: Emergency department re-presentations following intentional self-harm

Support people1st Presentation

2nd Presentation

Family/Whānau/ friends

33 (45%) 24 (32%)

Health Worker

10 (14%) 13 (18%)

Police 0 (0%) 2 (3%)

Unknown 1 (1%) 1 (1%)

None documented

29 (40%) 33 (46%)

Page 19: Emergency department re-presentations following intentional self-harm

Challenging Behaviours

Occurred in approximately 25% of presentations

Scenario: Person N presents to ED with lacerations to her lower legs. While waiting in a cubicle, she tries to set light to herself. She requires restraint and two security staff to ensure her safety.

Page 20: Emergency department re-presentations following intentional self-harm

Time to re-presentation

55% of re-presentations happened within one day (expected by MH: 22%/29%)

Also… Decreased mental health services referral

(88%/74%) Decreased assessments by MH (66%/55%) Admission rates 40% higher on re-

presentation (23%/32%)

Page 21: Emergency department re-presentations following intentional self-harm

Limitations

Retrospective data relies on staff documenting the real event

Once-only patient group probably included people that presented multiple times

Unable to obtain documentation by MH services

Page 22: Emergency department re-presentations following intentional self-harm

Recommendations

Training and supervision

Psychiatric staff in ED

Cultural assessment/input

Page 23: Emergency department re-presentations following intentional self-harm

Conclusion Number of

presentations? – no idea…

ED important for providing care

Population is vulnerable, distressed and at high risk of suicide