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Study of the outcome of suicide attempts: characteristics of hospitalization in a psychiatric ward group, critical care center group, and non-hospitalized group

BACKGROUND: The allocation of outcome of suicide attempters is extremely important in emergency situations. Following categorization of suicidal attempters who visited the emergency room by outcome, we aimed to identify the characteristics and potential needs of each group. METHODS: The outcomes of...

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Autores principales: Kudo, Kaoru, Otsuka, Kotaro, Endo, Jin, Yoshida, Tomoyuki, Isono, Hisayasu, Yambe, Takehito, Nakamura, Hikaru, Kawamura, Sachiyo, Koeda, Atsuhiko, Yagi, Junko, Kemuyama, Nobuo, Harada, Hisako, Chida, Fuminori, Endo, Shigeatsu, Sakai, Akio
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2821663/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20064269
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-244X-10-4
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author Kudo, Kaoru
Otsuka, Kotaro
Endo, Jin
Yoshida, Tomoyuki
Isono, Hisayasu
Yambe, Takehito
Nakamura, Hikaru
Kawamura, Sachiyo
Koeda, Atsuhiko
Yagi, Junko
Kemuyama, Nobuo
Harada, Hisako
Chida, Fuminori
Endo, Shigeatsu
Sakai, Akio
author_facet Kudo, Kaoru
Otsuka, Kotaro
Endo, Jin
Yoshida, Tomoyuki
Isono, Hisayasu
Yambe, Takehito
Nakamura, Hikaru
Kawamura, Sachiyo
Koeda, Atsuhiko
Yagi, Junko
Kemuyama, Nobuo
Harada, Hisako
Chida, Fuminori
Endo, Shigeatsu
Sakai, Akio
author_sort Kudo, Kaoru
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The allocation of outcome of suicide attempters is extremely important in emergency situations. Following categorization of suicidal attempters who visited the emergency room by outcome, we aimed to identify the characteristics and potential needs of each group. METHODS: The outcomes of 1348 individuals who attempted suicide and visited the critical care center or the psychiatry emergency department of the hospital were categorized into 3 groups, "hospitalization in the critical care center (HICCC)", "hospitalization in the psychiatry ward (HIPW)", or "non-hospitalization (NH)", and the physical, mental, and social characteristics of these groups were compared. In addition, multiple logistic analysis was used to extract factors related to outcome. RESULTS: The male-to-female ratio was 1:2. The hospitalized groups, particularly the HICCC group, were found to have biopsychosocially serious findings with regard to disturbance of consciousness (JCS), general health performance (GAS), psychiatric symptoms (BPRS), and life events (LCU), while most subjects in the NH group were women who tended to repeat suicide-related behaviors induced by relatively light stress. The HIPW group had the highest number of cases, and their symptoms were psychologically serious but physically mild. On multiple logistic analysis, outcome was found to be closely correlated with physical severity, risk factor of suicide, assessment of emergent medical intervention, and overall care. CONCLUSION: There are different potential needs for each group. The HICCC group needs psychiatrists on a full-time basis and also social workers and clinical psychotherapists to immediately initiate comprehensive care by a medical team composed of multiple professionals. The HIPW group needs psychological education to prevent repetition of suicide attempts, and high-quality physical treatment and management skill of the staff in the psychiatric ward. The NH group subjects need a support system to convince them of the risks of attempting suicide and to take a problem-solving approach to specific issues.
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spelling pubmed-28216632010-02-15 Study of the outcome of suicide attempts: characteristics of hospitalization in a psychiatric ward group, critical care center group, and non-hospitalized group Kudo, Kaoru Otsuka, Kotaro Endo, Jin Yoshida, Tomoyuki Isono, Hisayasu Yambe, Takehito Nakamura, Hikaru Kawamura, Sachiyo Koeda, Atsuhiko Yagi, Junko Kemuyama, Nobuo Harada, Hisako Chida, Fuminori Endo, Shigeatsu Sakai, Akio BMC Psychiatry Research article BACKGROUND: The allocation of outcome of suicide attempters is extremely important in emergency situations. Following categorization of suicidal attempters who visited the emergency room by outcome, we aimed to identify the characteristics and potential needs of each group. METHODS: The outcomes of 1348 individuals who attempted suicide and visited the critical care center or the psychiatry emergency department of the hospital were categorized into 3 groups, "hospitalization in the critical care center (HICCC)", "hospitalization in the psychiatry ward (HIPW)", or "non-hospitalization (NH)", and the physical, mental, and social characteristics of these groups were compared. In addition, multiple logistic analysis was used to extract factors related to outcome. RESULTS: The male-to-female ratio was 1:2. The hospitalized groups, particularly the HICCC group, were found to have biopsychosocially serious findings with regard to disturbance of consciousness (JCS), general health performance (GAS), psychiatric symptoms (BPRS), and life events (LCU), while most subjects in the NH group were women who tended to repeat suicide-related behaviors induced by relatively light stress. The HIPW group had the highest number of cases, and their symptoms were psychologically serious but physically mild. On multiple logistic analysis, outcome was found to be closely correlated with physical severity, risk factor of suicide, assessment of emergent medical intervention, and overall care. CONCLUSION: There are different potential needs for each group. The HICCC group needs psychiatrists on a full-time basis and also social workers and clinical psychotherapists to immediately initiate comprehensive care by a medical team composed of multiple professionals. The HIPW group needs psychological education to prevent repetition of suicide attempts, and high-quality physical treatment and management skill of the staff in the psychiatric ward. The NH group subjects need a support system to convince them of the risks of attempting suicide and to take a problem-solving approach to specific issues. BioMed Central 2010-01-12 /pmc/articles/PMC2821663/ /pubmed/20064269 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-244X-10-4 Text en Copyright ©2010 Kudo et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research article
Kudo, Kaoru
Otsuka, Kotaro
Endo, Jin
Yoshida, Tomoyuki
Isono, Hisayasu
Yambe, Takehito
Nakamura, Hikaru
Kawamura, Sachiyo
Koeda, Atsuhiko
Yagi, Junko
Kemuyama, Nobuo
Harada, Hisako
Chida, Fuminori
Endo, Shigeatsu
Sakai, Akio
Study of the outcome of suicide attempts: characteristics of hospitalization in a psychiatric ward group, critical care center group, and non-hospitalized group
title Study of the outcome of suicide attempts: characteristics of hospitalization in a psychiatric ward group, critical care center group, and non-hospitalized group
title_full Study of the outcome of suicide attempts: characteristics of hospitalization in a psychiatric ward group, critical care center group, and non-hospitalized group
title_fullStr Study of the outcome of suicide attempts: characteristics of hospitalization in a psychiatric ward group, critical care center group, and non-hospitalized group
title_full_unstemmed Study of the outcome of suicide attempts: characteristics of hospitalization in a psychiatric ward group, critical care center group, and non-hospitalized group
title_short Study of the outcome of suicide attempts: characteristics of hospitalization in a psychiatric ward group, critical care center group, and non-hospitalized group
title_sort study of the outcome of suicide attempts: characteristics of hospitalization in a psychiatric ward group, critical care center group, and non-hospitalized group
topic Research article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2821663/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20064269
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-244X-10-4
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