• Psychosomatics · May 2013

    Ask suicide-screening questions to everyone in medical settings: the asQ'em Quality Improvement Project.

    • Lisa M Horowitz, Deborah Snyder, Erica Ludi, Donald L Rosenstein, Julie Kohn-Godbout, Laura Lee, Tannia Cartledge, Adrienne Farrar, and Maryland Pao.
    • Office of the Clinical Director, National Institute of Mental Health, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD 20892, USA. horowitzl@mail.nih.gov
    • Psychosomatics. 2013 May 1;54(3):239-47.

    BackgroundSuicide in hospital settings is a frequently reported sentinel event to the Joint Commission (JC). Since 1995, over 1,000 inpatient deaths by suicide have been reported to the JC; 25% occurred in non-behavioral health settings. Lack of proper "assessment" was the leading root cause for 80% of hospital suicides. This paper describes the "Ask Suicide-Screening Questions to Everyone in Medical Settings (asQ'em)" Quality Improvement Project. We aimed to pilot a suicide screening tool and determine feasibility of screening in terms of prevalence, impact on unit workflow, impact on mental health resources, and patient/nurse acceptance.MethodsWe piloted the asQ'em two-item screening instrument that assesses suicidal thoughts and behaviors, designed specifically for nurses to administer to medical patients. Educational in-services were conducted. A convenience sample of adult patients, 18 years or older, from three selected inpatient units in the National Institutes of Health Clinical Center, participated.ResultsA total of 331 patients were screened; 13 (4%) patients screened "positive" for suicide risk and received further evaluation. No patient had acute suicidal thoughts or required an observational monitor. Screening took approximately 2 minutes; 87% of patients reported feeling comfortable with screening; 81% of patients, 75% of nurses, and 100% of social workers agreed that all patients in hospitals should be screened for suicide risk.DiscussionNurses can feasibly screen hospitalized medical/surgical patients for suicide risk with a two-item screening instrument. Patients, nurses, and social workers rated their experience of screening as positive and supported the idea of universal suicide screening in the hospital.Published by Elsevier Inc.

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