Baraff Larry J, Janowicz Nicole, Asarnow Joan R
Emergency Medicine Center, David Geffen School of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles, CA 90024, USA.
Ann Emerg Med. 2006 Oct;48(4):452-8, 458.e1-2. doi: 10.1016/j.annemergmed.2006.06.026. Epub 2006 Aug 21.
To determine the resources available and current practices for the treatment of patients with suicidal ideation or attempts in California emergency departments (EDs).
We conducted a mail and e-mail survey of the directors of all 346 EDs in the state of California. Data collected included identification of hospital and respondent, type of hospital, presence of separate psychiatric ED, total number of ED patients and number of ED patients with suicidal ideation or attempts who were treated per week, mental health personnel on call to evaluate suicidal patients, criteria for patient disposition, available disposition options, delays in patient care, changes desired in the ED treatment of suicidal patients, and adequacy of community resources for suicidal patients.
Two hundred twenty-three of 346 (64.5%) ED directors responded to the survey. Overall, the mean estimate of the proportion of ED visits by suicidal patients was 1.7%. Though evaluation of patients with suicidal ideation by a mental health professional was the usual practice, 51 respondents (23%) reported that they occasionally send patients with suicidal ideation home without such an evaluation, and 8.5% reported this was done more than 10% of the time. No single type of mental health professional, including psychiatrist, social worker, county or private psychiatric evaluation team, psychiatric nurse, or psychologist, was available for evaluation of suicidal patients in more than 50% of respondent EDs. In the majority of EDs, psychiatric evaluations were performed by either mobile county or private psychiatric evaluation teams or social workers on call to the ED. Psychiatrists were reported to evaluate the majority of suicidal patients in only 10% of EDs. Only 27% of respondents had the ability to admit patients to a psychiatric service at their hospital. When patients needed to be transferred, the estimated mean wait for these transfers was 7 hours. Seventy-one percent of respondents reported needing improved access to mental health personnel for evaluation of suicidal patients; 61% reported needing improved access to mental health personnel for patient disposition.
In California EDs, there are limited mental health services for suicidal patients. Regional solutions to emergency and nonemergency mental health problems are needed, including improved access to mental health personnel for ED evaluation, disposition, and follow-up of suicidal patients and community mental health resources for patient referrals.
确定加利福尼亚州急诊科治疗有自杀意念或自杀未遂患者时可用的资源及当前的治疗方法。
我们对加利福尼亚州所有346家急诊科的主任进行了邮件和电子邮件调查。收集的数据包括医院和受访者的信息、医院类型、是否设有独立的精神科急诊科、急诊科患者总数以及每周接受治疗的有自杀意念或自杀未遂的急诊科患者数量、应召评估自杀患者的心理健康人员、患者处置标准、可用的处置选项、患者护理延迟情况、急诊科对自杀患者治疗期望的改变以及自杀患者社区资源是否充足。
346名急诊科主任中有223名(64.5%)回复了调查。总体而言,自杀患者占急诊科就诊患者比例的平均估计值为1.7%。虽然通常做法是由心理健康专业人员对有自杀意念的患者进行评估,但51名受访者(23%)报告称他们偶尔会在未进行此类评估的情况下将有自杀意念的患者送回家,8.5%的受访者报告这种情况发生的频率超过10%。在超过50%的回复急诊科中,没有单一类型的心理健康专业人员(包括精神科医生、社会工作者、县或私人精神科评估团队、精神科护士或心理学家)可用于评估自杀患者。在大多数急诊科中,精神科评估由流动的县或私人精神科评估团队或应召到急诊科的社会工作者进行。据报告,只有10%的急诊科中精神科医生会评估大多数自杀患者。只有27%的受访者能够将患者收治到其医院的精神科服务部门。当患者需要转院时,这些转院的估计平均等待时间为7小时。71%的受访者报告需要改善获取心理健康人员以评估自杀患者的途径;61%的受访者报告需要改善获取心理健康人员以进行患者处置的途径。
在加利福尼亚州的急诊科,为自杀患者提供的心理健康服务有限。需要针对紧急和非紧急心理健康问题制定区域性解决方案,包括改善获取心理健康人员以对自杀患者进行急诊科评估、处置和随访,以及改善社区心理健康资源以便进行患者转诊。