SAFETYLIT WEEKLY UPDATE

We compile citations and summaries of about 400 new articles every week.
RSS Feed

HELP: Tutorials | FAQ
CONTACT US: Contact info

Search Results

Journal Article

Citation

Brand F, Lascelles K. Nurs. Stand. (1987) 2017; 31(37): 46-54.

Affiliation

Oxford Health NHS Foundation Trust, Oxford, England.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2017, Royal College of Nursing)

DOI

10.7748/ns.2017.e10229

PMID

28488518

Abstract

Aim To reduce the incidence of self-harming behaviour and improve well-being and experience of care for individuals who present regularly to the emergency department in one hospital following self-harm, by providing outpatient care.

METHOD This was a 12-month nurse-led practice development project to develop, implement and evaluate a brief-intervention outpatient service for individuals who presented to the emergency department following self-harm and who were identified as being at risk of further self-harm. The service improvement was informed by an action research process and the principles of appreciative inquiry.

FINDINGS The project provided a short-term outpatient follow-up service, known as Brief Interventions in Repeat Self Harm (BIRSH), to patients who presented to the emergency department following self-harm, and who were considered at risk of further self-harm. The intervention enabled the clinician to validate the patient's distress and offer them short-term outpatient follow-up care. The BIRSH sessions were offered to 38 patients. A total of 26 patients attended one or more BIRSH session, and all of these individuals showed a reduction in the number of presentations to the emergency department following self-harm in the six months following the intervention, compared to the six months before the intervention.

CONCLUSION The BIRSH outpatient service appears to have been a contributory factor in reducing self-harm for patients who engaged with the service. The service improvement was informed by an action research process and the principles of appreciative inquiry, which provided a positive, focused approach to the practice development project.


Language: en

Keywords

action research; appreciative inquiry; mental health; outpatient care; psychiatric liaison; research; self-harm; service improvement

NEW SEARCH


All SafetyLit records are available for automatic download to Zotero & Mendeley
Print