29 Investigating the population characteristics, processes and outcomes of pre-hospital psychiatric and self-harm emergencies in scotland: a national record linkage study

AimTo investigate the demographic characteristics, care pathways, and clinical and service outcomes of people who present to ambulance services with a psychiatric or self-harm emergencyMethodsWe conducted a retrospective cohort study of patients attended by the Scottish Ambulance Service in 2011 wit...

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Veröffentlicht in:BMJ open 2017-05, Vol.7 (Suppl 3), p.A11-A12
Hauptverfasser: Duncan, E, Best, C, Dougall, N, Skar, S, Fitzpatrick, D, Evans, J, Corfield, A, Goldie, I, Maxwell, M, Snooks, H, Stark, C, White, C, Wojcik, W
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Zusammenfassung:AimTo investigate the demographic characteristics, care pathways, and clinical and service outcomes of people who present to ambulance services with a psychiatric or self-harm emergencyMethodsWe conducted a retrospective cohort study of patients attended by the Scottish Ambulance Service in 2011 with ambulance clinician attendance codes relating to ‘psychiatric emergency’ or ‘self-harm’. Patients resident in Scotland and>=16 years on first contact were included. We used NHS Scotland’s Unscheduled Care Data Mart (1) to link data from: – the ambulance service; emergency departments (ED); general and psychiatric inpatient hospital admissions episodes; and death records.ResultsThere were 9014 calls from 6802 people. Slightly more males (n=4708, 52%) than females (n=4306, 48%) were attended. Most were discharged from ED with no known follow-up (n=4566; 51%). Some were left at home (n=1003 attendances, 11%). Almost half of the people (n=3238, 48%) made at least one repeat call. People who self-discharge from ED were more likely to have another ambulance attendance for psychiatric emergency/self-harm within the same year (Pearson chi square=5.24, p=0.02). Two hundred and seventy-nine (4%) people died within the study period, 97 (35%) were recorded as suicide. Ethical approval (NRES 15/EM/0260) and other data approvals were received.ConclusionWhile linked data analysis may not identify all relevant cases, it provides important information to guide the development and evaluation of evidence-based interventions. Ambulance service and ED are missing opportunities to improve outcomes for people who experience a psychiatric emergency or who self-harm. New interventions could lead to decreases in the number of suicides, episodes of self-harm and levels of patient distress; and ambulance and ED service use.ReferenceInformation Services Division (NHS Scotland) (2016) Unscheduled Care Datamart Background Paper. Accessible at http://www.isdscotland.org/Health-Topics/Emergency-Care/Patient-Pathways/unscheduledcare_background.pdf Accessed on 13/01/17Conflict of interestNone declared.FundingScottish Government, Chief Scientists Office
ISSN:2044-6055
2044-6055
DOI:10.1136/bmjopen-2017-EMSabstracts.29