Background: Suicide prevention is a health service priority. Suicide risk may be greatest during psychiatric in-patient admission and following discharge. Aims: To describe the social and clinical characteristics of a comprehensive sample of in-patient and post-discharge cases of suicide. Method: A national clinical survey based on a 4-year (1996-2000) sample of cases of suicide in England and Wales who had been in recent contact with mental health services (n=4859). Results: There were 754 (16%) current in-patients and a further 1100 (23%) had been discharged from psychiatric in-patient care less than 3 months before death. Nearly a quarter of the in-patient deaths occurred within the first 7 days of admission; 236 (31%) occurred on the ward, the majority by hanging. Post-discharge suicide was most frequent in the first 2 weeks after leaving hospital; the highest number occurred on the first day. Conclusions: Suicide might be prevented among in-patients by improving ward design and removing fixtures that can be used in hanging. Prevention of suicide after discharge requires early community follow-up and closer supervision of high-risk patients.
CITATION STYLE
Meehan, J., Kapur, N., Hunt, I. M., Turnbull, P., Robinson, J., Bickley, H., … Appleby, L. (2006, February). Suicide in mental health in-patients and within 3 months of discharge: National clinical survey. British Journal of Psychiatry. https://doi.org/10.1192/bjp.188.2.129
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