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Journal ArticleDOI

Suicide and recency of health care contacts. A systematic review.

Jane Pirkis, +1 more
- 01 Dec 1998 - 
- Vol. 173, Iss: 6, pp 462-474
TLDR
More work is needed to determine whether these people who die by suicide show characteristic patterns of care and/or particular risk factors which would enable a targeted approach to be developed to assist clinicians in detecting and managing high-risk patients.
Abstract
BACKGROUND Many countries have set targets for suicide reduction, and suggested that mental health care providers and general practitioners have a key role to play. METHOD A systematic review of the literature. RESULTS Among those in the general population who commit suicide, up to 41% may have contact with psychiatric inpatient care in the year prior to death and up to 9% may commit suicide within one day of discharge. The corresponding figures are 11 and 4% for community-based psychiatric care and 83 and 20% for general practitioners. CONCLUSIONS Among those who die by suicide, contact with health services is common before death. This is a necessary but not sufficient condition for clinicians to intervene. More work is needed to determine whether these people show characteristic patterns of care and/or particular risk factors which would enable a targeted approach to be developed to assist clinicians in detecting and managing high-risk patients.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Contact with mental health and primary care providers before suicide: A review of the evidence

TL;DR: Alternative approaches to suicide-prevention efforts may be needed for those less likely to be seen in primary care or mental health specialty care, specifically young men.
Journal ArticleDOI

Screening for Depression in Adults: A Summary of the Evidence for the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force

TL;DR: An updated systematic review for the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force found that several short, accurate, and easy-to-use instruments for detecting depression are available and appear to perform as well as longer instruments.
Journal ArticleDOI

Young people’s help-seeking for mental health problems

TL;DR: Wilson et al. as discussed by the authors investigated why young people do not seek help when they are in psychological distress or suicidal; how professional services can be made more accessible and attractive to young people; the factors that inhibit and facilitate help-seeking; and how community gatekeepers can support young people to access services to help with personal and emotional problems.
Journal ArticleDOI

Risk factors for suicide in individuals with depression: a systematic review.

TL;DR: A systematic review of the international literature on cohort and case-control studies of people with depression in which suicide was an outcome and meta-analyses of potential risk factors found factors significantly associated with suicide.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A Hundred Cases of Suicide: Clinical Aspects

TL;DR: Two recent American studies have shown more than 90 per cent of suicides to be mentally ill before their death, and the familiar clinical observation that suicidal thoughts disappear when the illness is successfully treated provide a strong case for a medical policy of prevention.
Journal ArticleDOI

Some clinical considerations in the prevention of suicide based on a study of 134 successful suicides.

TL;DR: The present investigation was designed to attempt to gain information about suicides occurring in metropolitan St. Louis in a one-year period by means of interviews with relatives, friends, job associates, physicians, and others shortly after each successful suicide.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mental illness and suicide. A case-control study in east Taiwan.

TL;DR: Despite the widely different rates of depressive illness and alcoholism in different cultures previously reported, the psychiatric antecedents of suicide are the same in the West and the East.
Journal ArticleDOI

Risk Factors for Suicide in Psychiatric Patients

TL;DR: In a matched controlled study of 90 psychiatric patient suicides, it was found that significantly more of the suicides suffered from chronic schizophrenia or recurrent affective disorder and had made a previous suicide attempt.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Last Appointment Before Suicide: Is Suicide Intent Communicated?

TL;DR: The majority of patients who commit suicide do not seem to communicate their intent to do so during their last appointment, and it was particularly uncommon in general practice and nonpsychiatric specialist settings.
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