The assessment and management of self-harming patients in an accident and emergency department: an action research project.

The Government, in Health of the Nation (DoH, 1992), set targets for health authorities to introduce specific interventions intended to reduce the rates of suicide in the districts for which they are responsible. Those who deliberately harm themselves are an important group for interventions aimed at suicide prevention. Self-harming individuals are known to seek help from a range of care providers, not just those specifically intended to meet their needs. Individuals with problems of self-poisoning and self-injury have placed increasing pressure on general hospital staff involved in their care. There should therefore be adequate services for suicide attempters in every general hospital. Policies and protocols must be introduced and evaluated, to ensure that the self-harmer's experience during crisis is not a catalogue of unhelpful encounters. This paper is an account of an action research project concerned with the assessment and management of self-harming patients in one accident and emergency department. The project aimed to enhance departmental policies and procedures for managing this group of patients. Practical problems can inhibit the introduction of even the most desirable of innovations. Action research provides a way of overcoming these problems whilst doing research at the same time.

[1]  K. Lewin Field theory in social science , 1951 .

[2]  Warren G. Bennis,et al.  Planning for change , 2018, Healthcare Architecture as Infrastructure.

[3]  I M King,et al.  Planning for change , 2020, A New World-System.

[4]  B. Barraclough,et al.  A Hundred Cases of Suicide: Clinical Aspects , 1974, British Journal of Psychiatry.

[5]  Dean Schuyler,et al.  Development of suicidal intent scales. , 1974 .

[6]  R. Ottaway A Change Strategy to Implement New Norms, New Styles and New Environment in the Work Organization , 1976 .

[7]  C. Murphy,et al.  Attempted suicide: a personal construct psychology exploration. , 1986, The Australian journal of advanced nursing : a quarterly publication of the Royal Australian Nursing Federation.

[8]  C. Benedict-Drew The Samaritans , 1986, The Lancet.

[9]  C. Webb,et al.  Action research: philosophy, methods and personal experiences. , 1989, Journal of advanced nursing.

[10]  W. Whyte Advancing scientific knowledge through participatory action research , 1989 .

[11]  L. Appleby Suicide in Psychiatric Patients: Risk and Prevention , 1992, British Journal of Psychiatry.

[12]  J. Lönnqvist,et al.  Attempted suicides: how should they be managed and suicide prevented? , 1992, Annals of medicine.

[13]  M. H. Alston,et al.  Nurses' Attitudes toward Suicide , 1992 .

[14]  K. Hawton,et al.  Trends in deliberate self poisoning and self injury in Oxford, 1976-90. , 1992, BMJ.

[15]  S. Palmer Para-suicide: a cause for nursing concern. , 1993, Nursing standard (Royal College of Nursing (Great Britain) : 1987).

[16]  L. Gitlin,et al.  Introduction to Research: Multiple Strategies for Health and Human Services , 1993 .

[17]  A. P. Boyes Repetition of overdose: a retrospective 5-year study. , 1994, Journal of advanced nursing.

[18]  K. Hawton,et al.  General hospital services for attempted suicide patients: a survey in one region. , 1995, Health trends.

[19]  A. House,et al.  The general hospital management of adult deliberate self-harm , 1995 .