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Encephale ; 40(5): 359-65, 2014 Oct.
Article in French | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25194753

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Many suicide victims had contacts with an emergency department before their attempt. We aimed to determine whether patients coming to a psychiatric emergency department were well assessed concerning their suicidal risk, and to test an easy to fill in scale rapidly assessing suicidal risk. METHOD: We conducted a descriptive epidemiological survey in Marseille. The source population was all patients admitted to the psychiatric emergency department. We used a booklet containing three questionnaires for "nurse", "psychiatrist" and "patient". We estimated the suicidal risk using both a visual analogue scale (similar for patients and caregivers), and validated scales on self-assessment (scale of suicidality SBQ-R and the Beck Hopelessness Scale). RESULTS AND DISCUSSION: The questionnaire results have shown that people who visited a psychiatric emergency department presented a significant suicidal risk on several criteria: socio-demographic criteria (social isolation, low level of education, low number of people with a job), psychiatric history (rate of pre-existing psychiatric disorders significantly higher than in the general population, high proportions of family and personal history of suicide attempts, psychiatric hospitalizations, and people with a psychiatrist). Six percent of patients claimed to have come to an emergency unit for suicidal ideas but they were ten times more with a suicidal risk, according to the SBQ-R score. The suicidal risk self-assessed by patients on our visual analogue scale was well correlated with SBQ-R scale and Beck Hopelessness scale, but was not well correlated with the evaluation of caregivers. CONCLUSION: Hence, the analog scale we created is easy to use and seems to be a good tool for suicidal risk estimation when it is self-assessed by patients in our study population.


Subject(s)
Emergency Services, Psychiatric , Patient Care Team , Risk Assessment , Self-Assessment , Suicidal Ideation , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Caregivers/psychology , Female , France , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Observer Variation , Prospective Studies , Reproducibility of Results , Statistics as Topic , Surveys and Questionnaires , Visual Analog Scale , Young Adult
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