Title of article :
A systematic review of psychometric assessment of self-harm risk in the emergency department
Author/Authors :
Randall، نويسنده , , Jason R. and Colman، نويسنده , , Ian AC Rowe، نويسنده , , Brian H.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
Abstract :
Background
ment of self harm risk is both a common and difficult task in emergency room settings. Psychometric measures have been developed to help with this assessment but it is uncertain how well these measures perform and which are clinically useful for assessment in this setting.
viewers independently assessed studies for relevance, inclusion, and study quality. Included studies classified mostly adult patients at risk for self-harm treated in an ED. The outcome variables selected were recurrence of self-harm/suicidal ideation or hospitalization. Only cohort study designs with follow-up were eligible.
s
56 potentially relevant abstracts, 12 studies were identified for inclusion in the review. Overall, the risk of bias was considered moderate to low in this review. Of the included studies reporting future self harm as an outcome measure, only the scales that are part of the Manchester self harm project, the Implicit Associations Test and the Violence and Suicide Assessment Form were found to successfully predict self harm. The four studies that assessed admission as an outcome utilized eight different actuarial methods. Of the scales assessed, six were found to be significant predictors of admission.
tions
not possible to perform a meta-analysis with the studies detected and it is uncertain whether publication bias or selection bias within the reviewed studies affected the results.
sion
l, while many methods used in the ED to assess suicidal and parasuicidal patients have strong psychometric properties, there is little clinical evidence supporting their use.
Keywords :
psychiatry , Emergency medicine , Self-Injurious Behaviors , risk assessment
Journal title :
Journal of Affective Disorders
Journal title :
Journal of Affective Disorders