Kaiser Permanente Washington Health Research Institute, Seattle (Richards, Grossman, Lee, Luce, Ludman, Simon, Penfold); Department of Health Services (Richards, Hohl, Segal, Penfold, Williams) and Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences (Whiteside, Simon), University of Washington, Seattle; NowMattersNow.org, Seattle (Whiteside); Center of Innovation for Veteran-Centered Value-Driven Care, Health Services Research and Development, Veterans Affairs (VA) Puget Sound Health Care System, Seattle (Williams); Department of Preventive Care, Kaiser Permanente Washington (Grossman).
Psychiatr Serv. 2021 Aug 1;72(8):898-904. doi: 10.1176/appi.ps.202000187. Epub 2021 May 4.
Addressing firearm access is recommended when patients are identified as being at risk of suicide. However, the practice of assessing firearm access is controversial, and no national guidelines exist to inform practice. This study qualitatively explored patient perspectives on a routine question about firearm access to optimize the patient centeredness of this practice in the context of suicide risk.
Electronic health record data were used to identify primary care patients reporting depressive symptoms, including suicidal thoughts, within 2 weeks of sampling. Participants completed a semistructured telephone interview (recorded and transcribed), which focused broadly on the experience of being screened for suicidality and included specific questions to elicit beliefs and opinions about being asked a standard firearm access question. Directive (deductive) and conventional (inductive) content analysis was used to analyze responses to the portion of the interview focused on firearm assessment and disclosure.
Thirty-seven patients in Washington State ages 20-95 completed the qualitative interview by phone. Organizing themes included apprehensions about disclosing access to firearms related to privacy, autonomy, and firearm ownership rights; perceptions regarding relevance of the firearm question, informed by experiences with suicidality and common beliefs and misconceptions about the inevitability of suicide; and suggestions for connecting questions about firearms and other lethal means to suicide risk.
Clarifying the purpose and use of routine firearm access assessment, contextualizing firearm questions within injury prevention broadly, and addressing misconceptions about suicide prevention may help encourage disclosure of firearm access and increase the patient centeredness of this practice.
当患者被确定有自杀风险时,建议解决枪支获取问题。然而,评估枪支获取的做法存在争议,并且没有国家指南来指导实践。本研究从定性角度探讨了患者对常规枪支获取问题的看法,以优化在自杀风险背景下该实践的以患者为中心的方法。
利用电子健康记录数据,确定在抽样后 2 周内报告有抑郁症状(包括自杀念头)的初级保健患者。参与者完成了半结构化电话访谈(录音并转录),访谈内容广泛集中在接受自杀风险筛查的体验上,包括具体问题,以了解患者对被问及标准枪支获取问题的信念和看法。采用指令性(演绎)和常规性(归纳)内容分析法对访谈中与枪支评估和披露相关的部分进行分析。
华盛顿州的 37 名年龄在 20-95 岁之间的患者通过电话完成了定性访谈。组织主题包括对与隐私、自主权和枪支所有权相关的枪支获取披露的担忧;对枪支问题相关性的看法,这些看法受到自杀经历以及对自杀必然性的常见信念和误解的影响;以及将枪支和其他致命手段的问题与自杀风险联系起来的建议。
明确常规枪支获取评估的目的和用途,将枪支问题纳入广泛的伤害预防背景下,并解决对自杀预防的误解,可能有助于鼓励枪支获取的披露,并提高该实践的以患者为中心的方法。