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Headline
The research has made significant additions to the evidence base related to suicide and self-harm prevention in the UK, such as providing information regarding the safe prescribing of antidepressants, as well as developing and piloting two interventions aimed at reducing the risk of suicide in high-risk groups.
Abstract
Objectives:
To carry out a programme of linked research studies aimed at improving the management of self-harm, reducing the incidence of suicide and providing reliable data to evaluate the impact of the National Suicide Prevention Strategy for England (2002).
Methods:
There were four research streams: (1) we studied inquest records from 12 coroners and Ministry of Justice data to assess the accuracy of official suicide statistics; (2) we used Office for National Statistics mortality statistics, data from the Multicentre Study of Self-harm in England, national liver unit data, prescription data and patient interviews to assess (a) the impact of paracetamol (acetaminophen) pack size restrictions (1998), (b) the impact of withdrawal of co-proxamol in 2007 and (c) the relative toxicity in overdose of commonly used antidepressants; (3) we carried out 3-month audits of self-harm management in 32 hospitals to investigate variations between hospitals and the impact of management on repeat self-harm; and (4) we developed and piloted letter-based contact interventions aimed at reducing self-harm.
Key findings:
(1) Between 1990 and 2005, the proportion of researcher-defined suicides given a verdict of suicide by the 12 coroners studied decreased by almost 7%, largely because of the increased use of misadventure/accident verdicts for deaths thought, on clinical review, to be suicides. Use of narrative verdicts increased markedly. Coroners who gave more narrative verdicts also gave fewer suicide verdicts, and geographical variations in the use of narrative verdicts appeared to distort reliable assessment of small-area differences in suicide rates. 2(a) UK legislation to reduce pack sizes of paracetamol was followed by a 43% reduction in number of deaths and a 61% reduction in registrations for liver transplantation over the next 11 years. Paracetamol overdoses were often impulsive and some were influenced by media (including the internet); sales outlets appeared mostly to be adhering to sales guidance. Smaller pack sizes of paracetamol for sale in Ireland compared with England did not result in a smaller number of tablets being taken in overdose. There was no clear evidence of an effect of the legislation on prescribing of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, nor on resulting gastrointestinal bleeds. 2(b) Withdrawal of co-proxamol from use in the UK resulted in approximately 600 fewer deaths than predicted between 2005 and 2010 based on previous trends, with no evidence of substitution by poisoning with other analgesics. 2(c) Of the tricyclic antidepressants, dosulepin and doxepin had the greatest toxicity. Citalopram was more toxic than other selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors. (3) There was marked variation between hospitals in the management of self-harm; effects of this variation on patient outcomes were unclear, although psychosocial assessment may have been associated with reduced repetition. Levels of specialist assessment remained static between 2001–2 and 2010–11, but service quality appeared to improve. (4) Findings of two pilot randomised controlled trials suggested that, although it would be feasible to scale up these interventions to full trials, these interventions might have low generalisability and be of limited benefit to patients.
Conclusion:
Within the context of the strengths and limitations of the individual studies, this research programme has made significant additions to the evidence base related to suicide and self-harm prevention in the UK.
Study registration:
A pilot study of a contact and information based intervention to reduce repeat self-harm; ISRCTN65171515.
Funding:
The National Institute for Health Research Programme Grants for Applied Research programme.
Contents
- Scientific summary
- Chapter 1. Introduction
- Chapter 2. The influence of changes in coroners' practices on the validity of national suicide rates in England
- Chapter 3. Studies to evaluate the impact of the 1998 UK legislation restricting pack sizes of paracetamol
- Abstract
- Background
- STUDY 1: LONG-TERM EVALUATION OF THE IMPACT OF REDUCED PACK SIZES OF PARACETAMOL ON POISONING DEATHS AND LIVER TRANSPLANT ACTIVITY IN ENGLAND AND WALES
- Objective
- Methods
- Results
- Discussion
- STUDY 2: AN INTERVIEW STUDY OF PATIENTS WHO HAVE TAKEN LARGER PARACETAMOL OVERDOSES
- Objectives
- Methods
- Results
- Discussion
- STUDY 3: A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF THE IMPACT OF DIFFERENT PACK SIZES OF PARACETAMOL ON INTENTIONAL OVERDOSES IN ENGLAND AND IRELAND
- Objective
- Methods
- Results
- Discussion
- STUDY 4: THE IMPACT OF LIMITATIONS ON PACK SIZES OF ANALGESICS ON USE OF NON-STEROIDAL ANTI-INFLAMMATORY DRUGS AND CONSEQUENT GASTROINTESTINAL BLEEDING AND USE OF MEDICATION FOR GASTROINTESTINAL DISORDERS
- Objectives
- Methods
- Results
- Discussion
- Chapter 4. Evaluation of the impact of co-proxamol withdrawal in England and Wales on prescribing and deaths
- Chapter 5. Toxicity of antidepressants: study of rates of suicide relative to prescribing and non-fatal overdose
- Chapter 6. Variations in self-harm service delivery: an observational study examining outcomes and temporal trends
- Chapter 7. A pilot randomised controlled trial of an information and contact-based intervention to reduce repeat self-harm
- Chapter 8. Development and pilot study of an intervention aimed at reducing the incidence of fatal and non-fatal self-harm in the period after psychiatric hospital discharge
- Chapter 9. Discussion
- Acknowledgements
- References
- Appendix 1 Form used to extract data on coroners' verdicts
- Appendix 2 Protocol for coding vignettes
- Appendix 3 Interrupted time-series segmented regression analysis
- Appendix 4 Questionnaire and topic guide for interview study with patients who had taken an overdose of paracetamol
- Appendix 5 Hospital interview questionnaire
- Appendix 6 Audit form
- Appendix 7 Topic guide: service user interviews
- Appendix 8 Topic guide: staff focus group
- Appendix 9 Leaflet provided to patients in the intervention group
- Appendix 10 Example letter for contact intervention
- Appendix 11 Topic guide: post-intervention participant interviews
- Appendix 12 Emergent themes from post-intervention participant interviews
- Appendix 13 Letters used for contact intervention
- Appendix 14 Intervention leaflet
- Appendix 15 Post-intervention participant questionnaire
- Appendix 16 Public and patient involvement in the research programme
- Glossary
- List of abbreviations
Article history
The research reported in this issue of the journal was funded by PGfAR as project number RP-PG-0606-1247. The contractual start date was in June 2011. The final report began editorial review in September 2012 and was accepted for publication in March 2013. As the funder, the PGfAR programme agreed the research questions and study designs in advance with the investigators. The authors have been wholly responsible for all data collection, analysis and interpretation, and for writing up their work. The PGfAR editors and production house have tried to ensure the accuracy of the authors' report and would like to thank the reviewers for their constructive comments on the final report document. However, they do not accept liability for damages or losses arising from material published in this report.
Declared competing interests of authors
David Gunnell, Keith Hawton and Nav Kapur are members of England's National Suicide Prevention Advisory Group. David Gunnell is also a member of the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) Pharmacovigilance Expert Advisory Group. Keith Hawton and Sue Simkin acted as temporary advisers to the MHRA for its evaluation of the efficacy and safety profile of co-proxamol. Nav Kapur was chairperson of the Guideline Development Group for the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence 2011 guidelines on the longer-term management of self-harm.
Disclaimer
This report contains transcripts of interviews, and similar, conducted in the course of the research and contains language which may offend some readers.
- NLM CatalogRelated NLM Catalog Entries
- Narrative verdicts and their impact on mortality statistics in England and Wales.[Health Stat Q. 2011]Narrative verdicts and their impact on mortality statistics in England and Wales.Hill C, Cook L. Health Stat Q. 2011 Spring; (49):81-100.
- Time trends in coroners' use of different verdicts for possible suicides and their impact on officially reported incidence of suicide in England: 1990-2005.[Psychol Med. 2013]Time trends in coroners' use of different verdicts for possible suicides and their impact on officially reported incidence of suicide in England: 1990-2005.Gunnell D, Bennewith O, Simkin S, Cooper J, Klineberg E, Rodway C, Sutton L, Steeg S, Wells C, Hawton K, et al. Psychol Med. 2013 Jul; 43(7):1415-22. Epub 2012 Nov 1.
- Long term effect of reduced pack sizes of paracetamol on poisoning deaths and liver transplant activity in England and Wales: interrupted time series analyses.[BMJ. 2013]Long term effect of reduced pack sizes of paracetamol on poisoning deaths and liver transplant activity in England and Wales: interrupted time series analyses.Hawton K, Bergen H, Simkin S, Dodd S, Pocock P, Bernal W, Gunnell D, Kapur N. BMJ. 2013 Feb 7; 346:f403. Epub 2013 Feb 7.
- Review Impact of restricting paracetamol pack sizes on paracetamol poisoning in the United Kingdom: a review of the literature.[Drug Saf. 2007]Review Impact of restricting paracetamol pack sizes on paracetamol poisoning in the United Kingdom: a review of the literature.Hawkins LC, Edwards JN, Dargan PI. Drug Saf. 2007; 30(6):465-79.
- Review Co-proxamol and suicide: preventing the continuing toll of overdose deaths.[QJM. 2005]Review Co-proxamol and suicide: preventing the continuing toll of overdose deaths.Simkin S, Hawton K, Sutton L, Gunnell D, Bennewith O, Kapur N. QJM. 2005 Mar; 98(3):159-70.
- A multicentre programme of clinical and public health research in support of the...A multicentre programme of clinical and public health research in support of the National Suicide Prevention Strategy for England
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