“Treat Them Like a Human Being…They are Somebody’s Somebody”: Providers’ Perspectives on Treating Patients in the Emergency Department After Self-Injurious Behavior

To understand ED providers’ perspective on how to best care for individuals who present to US emergency departments (EDs) following self-injurious behavior, purposive recruitment identified nursing directors, medical directors, and social workers (n = 34) for telephone interviews from 17 EDs. Respon...

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Veröffentlicht in:Community mental health journal 2023-02, Vol.59 (2), p.253-265
Hauptverfasser: Cullen, Sara Wiesel, Bowden, Cadence F., Olfson, Mark, Marcus, Steven C., Caterino, Jeffrey M., Ross, Abigail M., Doupnik, Stephanie K., True, Gala
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container_title Community mental health journal
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creator Cullen, Sara Wiesel
Bowden, Cadence F.
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Marcus, Steven C.
Caterino, Jeffrey M.
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Doupnik, Stephanie K.
True, Gala
description To understand ED providers’ perspective on how to best care for individuals who present to US emergency departments (EDs) following self-injurious behavior, purposive recruitment identified nursing directors, medical directors, and social workers (n = 34) for telephone interviews from 17 EDs. Responses and probes to “What is the single most important thing ED providers and staff can do for patients who present to the ED after self-harm?” were analyzed using directed content analysis approach. Qualitative analyses identified four themes: treat patients with respect and compassion; listen carefully and be willing to ask sensitive personal questions; provide appropriate care during mental health crises; connect patients with mental health care. Participants emphasized treating patients who present to the ED after self-injurious behavior with respect and empathy. Hospitals could incentivize provider mental health training, initiatives promoting patient-provider collaboration, and reimbursement strategies ensuring adequate staffing of providers with time to listen carefully.
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subjects Behavior
Community and Environmental Psychology
Compassion
Content analysis
Directors
Drug overdose
Emergency medical care
Emergency Service, Hospital
Emergency services
Empathy
Health behavior
Health care policy
Health initiatives
Health promotion
Hospitals
Humans
Medicaid
Medical directors
Medicine
Medicine & Public Health
Mental disorders
Mental Health
Mental health care
Mental health professionals
Mental health services
Nurses
Nursing
Original Paper
Patients
Pediatrics
Psychiatry
Qualitative research
Recruitment
Self destructive behavior
Self injury
Self-Injurious Behavior - therapy
Social workers
Staffing
Suicides & suicide attempts
Sympathy
Systematic review
title “Treat Them Like a Human Being…They are Somebody’s Somebody”: Providers’ Perspectives on Treating Patients in the Emergency Department After Self-Injurious Behavior
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