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Risk Factors for Repetition of Self-Harm: A Systematic Review of Prospective Hospital-Based Studies
- Source :
- PLoS ONE, DOAJ-Articles, Cork Open Research Archive, UnpayWall, ORCID, Microsoft Academic Graph, PubMed Central, Datacite, PLoS ONE, Vol 9, Iss 1, p e84282 (2014)
- Publication Year :
- 2014
- Publisher :
- Public Library of Science, 2014.
-
Abstract
- BackgroundSelf-harm entails high costs to individuals and society in terms of suicide risk, morbidity and healthcare expenditure. Repetition of self-harm confers yet higher risk of suicide and risk assessment of self-harm patients forms a key component of the health care management of self-harm patients. To date, there has been no systematic review published which synthesises the extensive evidence on risk factors for repetition.ObjectiveThis review is intended to identify risk factors for prospective repetition of self-harm after an index self-harm presentation, irrespective of suicidal intent.Data sourcesPubMed, PsychInfo and Scirus were used to search for relevant publications. We included cohort studies which examining factors associated with prospective repetition among those presenting with self-harm to emergency departments. Journal articles, abstracts, letters and theses in any language published up to June 2012 were considered. Studies were quality-assessed and synthesised in narrative form.ResultsA total of 129 studies, including 329,001 participants, met our inclusion criteria. Some factors were studied extensively and were found to have a consistent association with repetition. These included previous self-harm, personality disorder, hopelessness, history of psychiatric treatment, schizophrenia, alcohol abuse/dependence, drug abuse/dependence, and living alone. However, the sensitivity values of these measures varied greatly across studies. Psychological risk factors and protective factors have been relatively under-researched but show emerging associations with repetition. Composite risk scales tended to have high sensitivity but poor specificity.ConclusionsMany risk factors for repetition of self-harm match risk factors for initiation of self-harm, but the most consistent evidence for increased risk of repetition comes from long-standing psychosocial vulnerabilities, rather than characteristics of an index episode. The current review will enhance prediction of self-harm and assist in the efficient allocation of intervention resources.
- Subjects :
- Male
Non-Clinical Medicine
Epidemiology
Poison control
Alcohol abuse
Suicide prevention
Risk Factors
Psychology
Subsequent suicidal behavior
Problem Solving
Deliberate
Psychiatry
Multidisciplinary
Evidence-Based Medicine
Substance Abuse
General Medicine
Hospitals
Substance abuse
Clinical Psychology
Systematic review
Mental Health
Multicenter cohort
Medicine
Female
Health Services Research
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Risk assessment
Psychosocial
Cohort study
Research Article
Personality
Attempters
medicine.medical_specialty
Science
Psychological Stress
Repeat
Personality Disorders
General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
medicine
Humans
Treatment Guidelines
Health Care Policy
business.industry
Emergency department
Predictive scales
Mood Disorders
Cognitive Psychology
medicine.disease
Parasuicide repetition
Term follow-up
Schizophrenia
business
Self-Injurious Behavior
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 19326203
- Volume :
- 9
- Issue :
- 1
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- PLoS ONE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....6ff992b7186ae1579090c60560c37d38