| Literature DB >> 30683075 |
Masatoshi Inagaki1, Yoshitaka Kawashima2, Naohiro Yonemoto3, Mitsuhiko Yamada2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is evidence that several intervention types, including psychotherapy, reduce repeat suicide attempts. However, these interventions are less applicable to the heterogeneous patients admitted to emergency departments (EDs). The risk of a repeat suicide attempt is especially high in the first 6 months after the initial attempt. Therefore, it is particularly important to develop effective ED interventions to prevent repeat suicide attempts during this 6-month period.Entities:
Keywords: Emergency department; Meta-analysis; Self-harm; Suicide; Systematic review
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30683075 PMCID: PMC6347824 DOI: 10.1186/s12888-019-2017-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Psychiatry ISSN: 1471-244X Impact factor: 3.630
Fig. 1Study selection. Two and 11 trials, respectively, were included in a meta-analysis of the effect of active contact and follow-up interventions on repeat suicide attempts at 6 and 12 months. There have been no new publications on psychotherapy and pharmacotherapy interventions for suicide attempts since our previous meta-analysis. Therefore, we did not perform meta-analyses on the effect of these interventions in the present study
Active contact and follow-up interventions
| Intervention 1 | Intervention 2/Comparison intervention | Control (TAU, Placebo) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Intensive care plus outreach | |||
| Allard et al. 1992 [ | Intensive follow-up with scheduled visits | – | TAU: care by regular hospital personnel |
| Van Heeringen et al. 1995 [ | Home visit by nurse to patients who did not keep outpatient appointment | – | TAU: outpatient appointment |
| van der Sande et al. 1997 [ | Intensive inpatient and community intervention | – | TAU: routine clinical service |
| Morthorst et al. 2012 [ | Assertive intervention with outreach consultations | – | TAU: referral to a range of different treatment modalities |
| Kawanishi et al. 2014 [ | Assertive and continuous case management | – | TAU: enhanced usual care |
| Hatcher et al. 2015 [ | Support for up to 2 wk. and 4–6 sessions problem-solving therapy in 4 wk. followed by 8 postcards | – | TAU: referrals to multidisciplinary teams, crisis teams, and/or recommendations for engagement with community alcohol and drug treatment centers |
| Brief intervention and contact | |||
| Fleischmann et al. 2008 [ | Brief intervention and contact | – | TAU: the norms prevailing in the respective emergency departments |
| Mousavi et al. 2014 [ | Brief interventional contact followed by 7 follow-up telephone contacts | – | Brief interventional contact followed by treatment as usual |
| Letter or postcard | |||
| Carter et al. 2005 [ | Postcard sent | – | TAU: assessment and diagnosis by a psychiatrist |
| Beautrais et al. 2010 [ | Postcard sent | – | TAU: assessment and referral to community-based mental health services |
| Hassanian-Moghaddam et al. 2011 [ | Postcard sent | – | TAU: follow-up care was not coordinated |
| Telephone | |||
| Cedereke et al. 2002 [ | Telephone call at 4 and 8 mo | – | TAU: assessment by a psychiatrist and a social counsellor and referral to further general psychiatry treatment |
| Vaiva et al. 2006 [ | Telephone call from psychiatrists at 1 mo | Telephone call from psychiatrists at 3 mo | TAU: no telephone contact |
| Composite of letter/postcard and telephone | |||
| Kapur et al. 2013 [ | Information leaflet, two telephone calls within the first 2 wk., and a series of 6 letters over a 12-mo period | – | TAU: a mental health liaison nursing team to carry out specialist assessments |
We referred to and modified data from a previous paper by Inagaki et al. (2015), and we reviewed newly published studiesa and added new data to the present table
Abbreviations: wk week/weeks, mo month/months, TAU treatment as usual
Results of active contact and follow-up interventions
| Re-attempts | Death | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| No. of patients with re-attempts/No. of patients in each group analysis | No. of re-attempts/No. of patients in each group analysis | No. of any-cause deaths/No. of patients in each group analysis | No. of suicidal deaths/No. of patients in each group analysis | |
| Intensive care plus outreach | ||||
| Allard et al. 1992 [ | • E: 22/63; C: 19/63 | • E: 60/63; C: 54/63 | – | • E: 3/76; C 1/74 |
| Van Heeringen et al. 1995 [ | • E: 21/196; C: 34/195 | – | • 15 died in both groups | • E: 6/196; C: 7/195 |
| van der Sande et al. 1997 [ | • E: 24/140; C: 20/134 | • E: 32/140; C: 31/134 | – | • E: 1/140; C: 2/134 |
| Morthorst et al. 2012 [ | • E: 20/123; C: 13/120 (medically recorded) | – | • E: 2/123; C: 1/120 | • E: 1/123; C: 0/120 |
| Kawanishi et al. 2014 [ | • E: 3/444; C: 16/445 in 1 mo | – | • E: 46/460; C: 42/454 during the overall study period | • E: 27/460; C: 30/454 during the overall study period |
| Hatcher et al. 2015 [ | • E: 47/327; C: 42/357 in 3 mo | • E: 60/327; C: 62/357 in 3 mo | • E: 2/327; C: 4/357 in 12 mo | – |
| Brief intervention and contact | ||||
| Fleischmann et al. 2008 [ | • E: 66/863; C: 60/800 | – | • E: 11/872; C: 22/827 | • E: 2/872; C: 18/827 |
| Mousavi et al., 2014 [ | • E: 1/69; C: 4/70 in 6 mo | – | – | – |
| Letter or postcard | ||||
| Carter et al. 2005 [ | • E: 57/378; C: 68/394 in 12 mo | • E: 101/378; C: 192/394 in 12 mo | • E: 22/378; C: 22/394 in 60 mo | • E: 5/378; C: 6/394 in 60 mo |
| Beautrais et al. 2010 [ | • E: 39/153; C: 49/174 | • E: 87/153; C: 136/174 | – | – |
| Hassanian-Moghaddam et al. 2011 [ | • E: 31/1043; C: 55/1070 in 12 mo | • E: 34/1043; C: 58/1070 in 12 mo | • E: 7/1150; C: 2/1150 in 12 mo | • E: 8/1150; C: 4/1150 in 24 mo |
| Telephone | ||||
| Cedereke et al. 2002 [ | • E: 14/83 vs. C: 15/89 | • E: 26/83 vs. C: 27/89 | – | • E: 1/107; C: 1/109 |
| Vaiva et al. 2006 [ | • E1: 24/147; E2: 20/146; C: 59/312 | – | • 6 died in three groups | • E1: 0/147; E2: 1/146; C: 2/312 |
| Composite of letter/postcard and telephone | ||||
| Kapur et al. 2013 [ | • E: 11/33; C: 4/32 | • E: 41/33; C: 7/32 | • E: 1/33; C:0/32 | – |
We referred to and modified data from a previous paper by Inagaki et al. (2015), and we reviewed newly published studiesa and added new data to the present table
Abbreviations: E experimental intervention group, C control group
Fig. 2Primary outcome: Suicide attempts within 6 months for active contact and follow-up interventions. Two trials of active contact and follow-up interventions reported suicide attempts within 6 months [41, 45]. Two trials were included in the meta-analysis [41, 45]. The number of included participants and the number of participants who made repeat suicide attempts in each trial are shown in Table 1. To assess heterogeneity, we used the Cochrane Q statistic to examine heterogeneity among the trials in each analysis. We regarded heterogeneity as substantial if the Cochrane Q test produced a low p-value (< 0.10)
Fig. 3Secondary Outcome: Suicide attempts within 12 months for active contact and follow-up interventions. a The meta-analysis included 11 trials [24, 27, 30, 37, 39–41, 44, 50–52]. The number of included participants and the number of participants who made repeat suicide attempts in each trial are shown in Table 1. To assess heterogeneity, we used the I2 and Cochrane Q statistics to examine heterogeneity among the trials in each analysis. We regarded heterogeneity as substantial if I2 was greater than 30% or if the Cochrane Q test produced a low p-value (< 0.10). b We investigated publication bias by constructing a funnel plot and by using the Egger test