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The Journal of pediatrics · Mar 2016
Multicenter StudyTo Ask or Not to Ask? Opinions of Pediatric Medical Inpatients about Suicide Risk Screening in the Hospital.
- Abigail M Ross, Erina White, Daniel Powell, Sally Nelson, Lisa Horowitz, and Elizabeth Wharff.
- Boston Children's Hospital, Boston, MA. Electronic address: abigail.ross@childrens.harvard.edu.
- J. Pediatr. 2016 Mar 1; 170: 295-300.
ObjectiveTo describe opinions about suicide risk screening in a pediatric medical inpatient sample.Study DesignAs part of a larger instrument validation study, 200 pediatric medical inpatients (ages 10-21 years) were screened for suicide risk. Participants completed demographic self-report forms and were asked their opinions about suicide risk screening. Patient responses were recorded verbatim by trained research social workers. Qualitative data was analyzed using thematic analysis.ResultsThe majority of adolescents who participated had not been previously asked about suicide (N = 101; 62.3%) and were supportive of suicide risk screening (81.0%). Five salient themes emerged from the qualitative analysis of patient opinions: prevention, elevated risk, emotional benefits, provider responsibility, and lack of harm in asking.ConclusionsThe majority of youth screened for suicide risk on medical inpatient units were supportive of suicide risk screening. Opinion data have the potential to inform screening practices and assure clinicians that suicide risk screening will be acceptable to pediatric patients and their parents. Given the lack of screening in these patients' past experiences, the medical setting is a unique opportunity to capture youth at risk for suicide.Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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