| Literature DB >> 26823923 |
Carol W Runyan1, Amy Becker2, Sara Brandspigel3, Catherine Barber4, Aimee Trudeau5, Douglas Novins2.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: A youth's emergency department (ED) visit for suicidal behaviors or ideation provides an opportunity to counsel families about securing medications and firearms (i.e., lethal means counseling).Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26823923 PMCID: PMC4729425 DOI: 10.5811/westjem.2015.11.28590
Source DB: PubMed Journal: West J Emerg Med ISSN: 1936-900X
FigureReceipt of counseling, participation in follow-up interviews, and family reports of storage behaviors.
ED, emergency department
Characteristics of families with completed follow-up interview (n=114) vs. no interview (n=95) based on data from medical record.
| Characteristics (derived from medical record) | Interviewed (n=114) | Not interviewed (n=95) |
|---|---|---|
| Sex of patient (p=0.71) | ||
| Female | 82 (72%) | 66 (69%) |
| Age of patient (p=0.17) | ||
| <15 | 60 (53%) | 59 (62%) |
| 15+ | 54 (47%) | 36 (38%) |
| Language preference (p=0.75) | ||
| English | 100 (88%) | 80 (84%) |
| Spanish | 13 (11%) | 12 (13%) |
| Time of arrival to ED | ||
| Daytime (7AM–6:59PM) | 68 (60%) | 59 (62%) |
| Nighttime (7PM–6:59AM) | 36 (32%) | 30 (32%) |
| Day of arrival to ED | ||
| Weekday | 90 (79%) | 69 (73%) |
| Weekend | 14 (12%) | 20 (21%) |
| Reported guns at home at time of ED visit (p=0.14) | 33 (29%) | 19 (20%) |
| Reported medications at home at time of ED visit (p=0.38) | 110 (96%) | 94 (99%) |
| Accepted a lock box during visit (p=0.28) | 99 (87%) | 87 (92%) |
ED, emergency department
Based on time of triage recorded in medical record.
Missing data for some variable for 16 patients.
Comparison of medication and gun storage behavior reported by parents at time of visit and in follow-up interview among those completing a follow-up interview (n=114).
| At the time of ED visit n (%) | At the time of follow-up n (%) | Statistical test of change over time period | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Medication storage among families indicating they had medications in the home at visit (n=110, 96%) | |||
| All locked | 10 (9%) | 84 (76%) | p=0.0016 |
| Gun storage at time of ED visit among families indicating they had guns in the home at visit (n=33, 29%) | |||
| All locked | 22 (67%) | 33 (100%) | p=0.0004 |
ED, emergency department
From flow sheet data recorded by counselor on day of visit.
From follow-up interview.
At the visit, we recorded 9 (8%) reporting some were locked; 89 (81%) reporting none were locked, and 2 (2%) responses were missing or reported “not sure”. At follow-up the question only asked if there were “any unlocked medications at home today”. Data missing for one family.
At the visit, we recorded no families reporting some guns were locked, 9 (27%) reporting that none were locked and 2 (6%) indicating they were unsure of whether guns were locked or not. At follow-up, the question asked if there were “unlocked guns at home today”.
Chi Square test.
Fisher’s Exact test.