Assessment of a patient after hospital-treated self-harm or psychiatric hospitalization often includes a risk assessment, resulting in a classification of high risk versus low risk for a future episode of self-harm. Through systematic review and a series of meta-analyses looking at unassisted clinician risk classification (eight studies; N = 22,499), we found pooled estimates for sensitivity 0.31 (95% CI: 0.18-0.50), specificity 0.85 (0.75-0.92), positive predictive value 0.22 (0.21-0.23), and negative predictive value 0.89 (0.86-0.92). Clinician classification was too inaccurate to be clinically useful. After-care should therefore be allocated on the basis of a needs rather than risk assessment
The study by Quinlivan and colleagues1 could be interpreted to suggest that clinician and patient ra...
Background: A priority for health services is to reduce self-harm in young people. Predicting self-h...
Commentary on: Murphy E, Kapur N, Webb R, et al. Risk assessment following self-harm: comparison of ...
Background Scales are widely used in psychiatric assessments following self-harm. Robust evidence f...
Background: Scales are widely used in psychiatric assessments following self-harm. Robust evidenc...
Background Scales are widely used in psychiatric assessments following self-harm. Robust evidence fo...
This month's BJPsych publishes two important studies concerned with the use of risk assessment scale...
BACKGROUND: People with a history of self-harm are at a far greater risk of suicide than the general...
Background Risk scales are used widely in the management of patients presenting to hospital followin...
The aims of this review were to calculate the diagnostic accuracy statistics of risk scales followin...
BackgroundPrediction of suicidal behaviour is an aspirational goal for clinicians and policy makers;...
Background: Few instruments have been developed to assess the risk of self-harm by psychiatric patie...
Prediction models assist in stratifying and quantifying an individual's risk of developing a particu...
To date, research on risk for self-harming behavior has been oflimited success. This has led to diff...
Commentary on: Murphy E, Kapur N, Webb R, et al. Risk assessment following self-harm: comparison of ...
The study by Quinlivan and colleagues1 could be interpreted to suggest that clinician and patient ra...
Background: A priority for health services is to reduce self-harm in young people. Predicting self-h...
Commentary on: Murphy E, Kapur N, Webb R, et al. Risk assessment following self-harm: comparison of ...
Background Scales are widely used in psychiatric assessments following self-harm. Robust evidence f...
Background: Scales are widely used in psychiatric assessments following self-harm. Robust evidenc...
Background Scales are widely used in psychiatric assessments following self-harm. Robust evidence fo...
This month's BJPsych publishes two important studies concerned with the use of risk assessment scale...
BACKGROUND: People with a history of self-harm are at a far greater risk of suicide than the general...
Background Risk scales are used widely in the management of patients presenting to hospital followin...
The aims of this review were to calculate the diagnostic accuracy statistics of risk scales followin...
BackgroundPrediction of suicidal behaviour is an aspirational goal for clinicians and policy makers;...
Background: Few instruments have been developed to assess the risk of self-harm by psychiatric patie...
Prediction models assist in stratifying and quantifying an individual's risk of developing a particu...
To date, research on risk for self-harming behavior has been oflimited success. This has led to diff...
Commentary on: Murphy E, Kapur N, Webb R, et al. Risk assessment following self-harm: comparison of ...
The study by Quinlivan and colleagues1 could be interpreted to suggest that clinician and patient ra...
Background: A priority for health services is to reduce self-harm in young people. Predicting self-h...
Commentary on: Murphy E, Kapur N, Webb R, et al. Risk assessment following self-harm: comparison of ...