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Screening for suicide risk – The need, the possibilities, and a call for resources

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 May 2020

Stephen B. Freedman*
Affiliation:
Sections of Pediatric Emergency Medicine and Gastroenterology, Alberta Children's Hospital, Alberta Children's Hospital Research Institute, Cumming School of Medicine, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB
Amanda S. Newton
Affiliation:
Department of Pediatrics, Faculty of Medicine & Dentistry, University of Alberta, Edmonton
*
Correspondence to: Stephen B. Freedman, Alberta Children's Hospital, C4-634 28 Oki Drive NW, Calgary, AB, T3B 6A8; E-mail: Stephen.freedman@ahs.ca

Abstract

Type
Commentary
Copyright
Copyright © Canadian Association of Emergency Physicians 2020

In this issue of CJEM, Lee and colleagues contribute an important perspective on the risk of suicide death among youth following an emergency department (ED) visit for a mental-health-related concern and the timing of suicide death after such visits.Reference Lee, Black, Meckler and Doan1 Youth and their families who present to EDs during a mental health crisis are some of the most vulnerable, scared, and stressed patients evaluated in EDs. While recent Canadian literature exists on the risk of death among youth after an ED visit for deliberate self-harm,Reference Gardner, Pajer and Cloutier2 to our knowledge, this risk has yet to be comprehensively detailed among those with ED visits for non-self-harm-related mental health crises. The study by Lee et al.Reference Lee, Black, Meckler and Doan1 fills a critical knowledge gap, because ED clinicians are concerned about the risk, safety, and well-being of all youth presenting with mental health concerns.

In their study, Lee and colleagues found that the risk of death by suicide or indeterminate cause was threefold higher for youth with ED mental health visits compared to youth with non-mental, health-related visits. While this seems to present a population in need of a targeted intervention, the challenge is that the median time to suicide death was 5.2 years. These findings are important and should inform a national dialogue on the practice and implications of screening for suicide risk in all ED patients presenting with mental health concerns. Such a discussion is needed to help clarify the role of the ED in relation to the continuum of mental health and social services. What is particularly challenging is, how can the magnitude of risk and timing for suicide, as reported by Lee et al.,Reference Lee, Black, Meckler and Doan1 be used to guide ED resource utilization and disposition decision-making?

Screening to assess for suicide risk among pediatric mental health patients should be standard ED practice. The premise behind screening is that mental health patients have a self-harm risk that is typically under-detected.Reference DeVylder, Ryan and Cwik3 While the Lee et al.Reference Lee, Black, Meckler and Doan1 study quantifies the risk in this patient population, a recent study also demonstrated that screening can effectively identify risk in patients with a range of mental health concerns.Reference DeVylder, Ryan and Cwik3 A core tenet of screening is that the practice employs a standardized and validated tool to allow clinicians to rule-in and rule-out immediate risk among ED patients.Reference Newton, Soleimani, Kirkland and Gokiert4 The goal is to quickly identify those youth who require a more in-depth clinical assessment by a trained mental healthcare professional regarding intent and means for self-harm and potential death by suicide. U.S.-based organizations have rapidly endorsed the importance of screening all mental health patients and are mandating or providing resources to facilitate this practice.5,6 The same level of action has yet to occur in Canada; to date, no formal recommendations or guidelines on screening in an ED setting exist. What is now needed is investment in understanding the mid- and longer-term impacts of ED-based screening. This includes studies of its impact on access and time to mental health and social services, healthcare costs and resources, and, most importantly, the number of deaths by suicide.

Community-based mental health and/or social services must be available and accessible to youth who intentionally harm themselves, as well as those without self-harm complaints yet screen positive and, thus, might also be at risk of death by suicide. Over two-thirds of youth who come to an ED for a mental health emergency will be discharged homeReference Santilles, Axeen, Lam and Menchine7; this is also true for those youth who present to the ED with suicidal ideation and/or self-harming behaviours.Reference Burstein, Agostino and Greenfield8 Findings from the Lee et al. study suggest that such youth continue to be at risk of death by suicide or indeterminate cause for many years after an index ED visit. As nearly 70% of youth who later died by suicide had been admitted at the initial ED visit, even hospitalization is not a long-term solution for all youth. What the Lee et al. study does not tell us is what the healthcare trajectories were for youth who died by suicide years after an ED visit. Did these youth access healthcare or social services in the year or months preceding their death? Were services and support available but not accessed by youth? Conversely, were services and support not available for youth in their communities?

Many gaps are documented for access to mental health and social services in Canada (see a contemporary commentaryReference Gratzer and Goldbloom9), including the concern that the lack of integration of mental health services into provincial healthcare plans continues to perpetuate existing barriers (e.g., financial) to access and treatment.Reference Cawthorpe10 This makes it likely that some youth in the Lee et al. study did not receive the care and services that they needed throughout their lifetime. Identifying at-risk children through early screening and intervention before they present to an ED with significant self-harm behaviours is necessary to alter their trajectories and improve health and well-being outcomes. In an ideal healthcare system, there is a coordinated continuum of mental health promotion, prevention, and intervention services in all communities. This continuum supports youth early on in childhood to develop skills and reduce stigma around mental health, identifies and supports at-risk and vulnerable youth, and ensures that youth are cared for in and by their communities. While this continuum of care extends well beyond the ED setting, clinicians who screen youth in the ED for suicide risk do face an ethical dilemma if they identify at-risk youth but have no available or accessible follow-up services to offer. At this time, improved transitions from acute emergency care to short- and longer-term mental healthcare solutions are necessary in order to increase service engagement after an ED visit and decrease the potential for continued crises (e.g., repeated ED visits). The Lee et al. studyReference Lee, Black, Meckler and Doan1 should serve as a wake-up call and a reminder that one of our most vulnerable patient populations, youth with mental health concerns, continue to need us, their care providers, to advocate for their access to the post-ED visit care they need and deserve.

Acknowledgements

Dr. Stephen Freedman is supported by the Alberta Children's Hospital Foundation Professorship in Child Health and Wellness.

Competing interests

None declared.

References

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