Survey of California Emergency Departments About Practices for Management of Suicidal Patients and Resources Available for Their Care
Study objective
To determine the resources available and current practices for the treatment of patients with suicidal ideation or attempts in California emergency departments (EDs).
Methods
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.
Results
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.
Conclusion
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.
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Supervising editor: Debra E. Houry, MD, MPHAuthor contributions: LJB and NJ conceived and designed the survey and supervised data collection. JRA obtained research funding and contributed to the design of the study. LJB provided statistical oversight and analyzed the data. NJ and LJB drafted the article, and all authors contributed substantially to its revision. LJB takes responsibility for the paper as a whole.Funding and support: This publication was supported in part by grant No. R49/CCR921708 from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Its contents are solely the responsibility of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official views of Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.Reprints not available from the authors.
PII: S0196-0644(06)00883-3
doi:10.1016/j.annemergmed.2006.06.026
© 2006 American College of Emergency Physicians. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Refers to article:
- Improving the Design of the Assessment of Emergency Department Patients at Risk for Self-Harm
