Suicide Risk and Self Harm Flashcards

1
Q

Risk Factors of suicide - 6

A
  • depression
  • psychiatric disorders (90%)
  • negative life events
  • alcohol and drug misuse
  • physical illness
  • exposure to others suicidal behavior
  • access to methods of self-harm
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2
Q

How should a suicidal pt be assessed

A
  • quiet room preferably on their own
  • open questioning is more asvisable, although closed questions may be nessesary for clarification

Specific questions may include:
- are you feeling hopeless like life is not worth living
- have they made plans to end their life
- do they have access to sucicidal acts

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3
Q

When should doctors involve others

A

With consent, its recommended that clinicians inform family and friends as a support network

if they cannot act with consent, clinician should act in the patients best interests

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4
Q

Give examples of self harm methods - 7

A
  • taking too many tablets
  • cutting yourself
  • burning yourself
  • banging your head
  • punching yourself
  • sticking things into your body
  • swallowing things that shouldnt be swallowed
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5
Q

risk factors of self harm - 6

A
  • young people
  • being exposed to self-harm behaviour
  • mental health problems
  • childhood neglect or abuse
  • stressful life events
  • chronic physical health problems
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6
Q

Complications of self harm -3

A
  • acute liver failure (following paracetamol overdose)
  • repeated self harm
  • suicide risk
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7
Q

Management following an act of self harm - 5

A
  • examine physical injuries and treat
  • assess mental state e.g. depression screen
  • assess suicide risk
  • assess safeguarding concerns especially with children
  • ensure follow up is arranged
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8
Q

Explain the Mental Capacity Acts 5 key principals

A
  1. Presumption of capacity — adults should always be presumed to have the capacity to make a decision
  2. Maximizing decision-making capacity — the person must be given all practical support before it can be decided that they lack capacity. Support may involve extra time for assessment, repeating the assessment if capacity fluctuates, or using an interpreter, sign language, or pictures.
  3. The freedom to make seemingly unwise decisions — if the person makes a seemingly unwise decision, this in itself is not proof of incapacity.
  4. Best interests — any decision or action taken on behalf of the person must be in their best interests.
  5. The least restrictive alternative — when a decision is made on the person’s behalf, the healthcare professional must choose the alternative that interferes least with the person’s rights and freedoms while still achieving the necessary goal.
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9
Q

What indicates that a person does not have capacity - 3

A

They are unable to:
- understand relevant infomation
- retain that infomation
- communicate their decision

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10
Q

Who does the Mental Health Act allow compulsary admission of - 2

A

People who have a mental disorder that warrants treatment AND need to be admitted in the interests of their own or others health and safety

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11
Q

Difference between Section 2, 3 and 4 of the Mental Health Act

A

2 - compulsary asmission for up to 28 days
3 - compulsary admission for up to 6 months
4 - compulsary admission for 72 hours in an emergency

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