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Title: Assessment and management of self-harm in older adults attending accident and emergency: a comparative cross-sectional study. Author: Marriott R, Horrocks J, House A, Owens D. Journal: Int J Geriatr Psychiatry; 2003 Jul; 18(7):645-52. PubMed ID: 12833309. Abstract: OBJECTIVE: Older people who undertake self-harm are at higher suicide risk than are younger patients. This study examines whether this greater risk is reflected in the assessment and after-care that older patients receive when they attend accident and emergency. METHOD: This cross-sectional study, set in the two accident and emergency departments in a large industrial city in Northern England, compared 141 consecutive attendances due to self-harm among older patients (aged 55 years and over) with a random sample of 125 attendances of younger people (aged 15-54) attending because of self-harm. Data were drawn from accident and emergency records and from psychiatric and general hospital casenotes. RESULTS: Compared with the younger group, older patients were significantly more likely to be admitted from accident and emergency to the general hospital, to receive a specialist assessment whilst at the hospital, and to be offered psychiatric after-care-either as a psychiatric in-patient or an out-patient. CONCLUSIONS: Fortunately, older people attending accident and emergency following self-harm seemed likely to receive psychosocial assessment from a mental health specialist, and they were much more likely than younger patients to be offered after-care. Hospitals will need to monitor accident and emergency and other records if they are to check that their services are responding to the high risks seen in older patients.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]