• Login
    Browsing Self Harm and Suicide by Issue Date 
    •   ORKA Home
    • Conditions, Lifestyle Factors & Interventions
    • Conditions
    • Self Harm and Suicide
    • Browsing Self Harm and Suicide by Issue Date
    •   ORKA Home
    • Conditions, Lifestyle Factors & Interventions
    • Conditions
    • Self Harm and Suicide
    • Browsing Self Harm and Suicide by Issue Date
    JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.

    Browsing Self Harm and Suicide by Issue Date

    Sort by:

    Order:

    Results:

    Now showing items 21-40 of 44

    • title
    • issue date
    • submit date
    • xmlui.ArtifactBrowser.ConfigurableBrowse.sort_by.discipline
    • ascending
    • descending
    • 5
    • 10
    • 20
    • 40
    • 60
    • 80
    • 100
      • Thumbnail

        Technology Matters: BlueIce – using a smartphone app to beat adolescent self‐harm 

        Tingley, Jessica; Greenhalgh, Isobel; Stallard, Paul (2020-06)
        Despite the recent proliferation of mental health apps, few have directly focused on the prevention of self-harm. The available apps are described and the limited, although encouraging, outcome data are summarised. The ...
      • Thumbnail

        Pharmacological interventions for self-harm in adults (Protocol) 

        Hawton, Keith (2020-07)
        This is a protocol for a Cochrane Review (intervention). The objectives are as follows: To assess the effects of psychosocial or pharmacological interventions for self‐harm (SH) compared to comparison types of care (e.g. ...
      • Thumbnail

        Environmental changes to reduce self-harm on an adolescent inpatient psychiatric ward: an interrupted time series analysis 

        Reen, Gurpreet; Bailey, Jill; McGuigan, Lorna; Bloodworth, Natasha; Vincent, Charles (2020-07)
        Existing interventions to reduce self-harm in adolescents admitted to psychiatric wards are usually focused on individual psychological treatments. However, the immediate ward environment in which treatment takes place is ...
      • Thumbnail

        The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on self-harm and suicidal behaviour: a living systematic review [version 1; peer review: 1 approved] 

        Hawton, Keith (2020-09)
        Background: The COVID-19 pandemic has caused morbidity and mortality, as well as, widespread disruption to people’s lives and livelihoods around the world. Given the health and economic threats posed by the pandemic to ...
      • Thumbnail

        Changing paramedic students' perception of people who self-harm 

        External author(s) only (2020-10)
        This study aimed to identify whether paramedic students' perceptions of patients who self-harm changed following an educational intervention. Background: Self-harm is a major public health concern with an increasing ...
      • Thumbnail

        Reporting on suicidal behaviour and COVID-19—need for caution 

        Hawton, Keith (2020-11)
        News reporting on suicidal behaviour can have a considerable influence on suicide and self-harm in the general population.1 This issue is particularly relevant during the COVID-19 pandemic. With a rising number of ...
      • Thumbnail

        Self-harm on roads: Register-based study of methods and characteristics of individuals involved 

        Hawton, Keith (2020-12)
        Background Suicide on roads is receiving increased attention. However, there has been little research on non-fatal road-related self-harm. This study was conducted in order to investigate the characteristics of such ...
      • Thumbnail

        Effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on self-harm 

        Hawton, Keith (2020-12)
        There has been extensive discussion, some of it data-based1 but much of it speculative, on the effect of the COVID-19 pandemic on suicide. Since death by suicide requires thorough investigation by professionals, such as ...
      • Thumbnail

        Accuracy of individual and combined risk-scale items in the prediction of repetition of self-harm: multicentre prospective cohort study 

        Hawton, Keith (2020-12)
        Background Individuals attending emergency departments following self-harm have increased risks of future self-harm. Despite the common use of risk scales in self-harm assessment, there is growing evidence that combinations ...
      • Thumbnail

        Impact of Web-Based Sharing and Viewing of Self-Harm–Related Videos and Photographs on Young People: Systematic Review 

        Hawton, Keith; Stewart, Anne (2021-03)
        Given recent moves to remove or blur self-harm imagery or content on the web, it is important to understand the impact of posting, viewing, and reposting self-harm images on young people. Objective: The aim of this ...
      • Thumbnail

        Suicidal behavior in individuals accused or convicted of child sex abuse or indecent image offenses: Systematic review of prevalence and risk factors 

        Hawton, Keith (2021-04)
        Objective: An emerging body of research indicates that child sex abuse (CSA) of-fenders are at high risk of suicide when their offenses come to light and that those accused of accessing indecent images of children (IIOC) ...
      • Thumbnail

        mHealth Interventions for Self-Harm: Scoping Review 

        Tingley, Jessica; Greenhalgh, Isobel; Stallard, Paul (2021-04)
        Background: Self-harm is a growing issue with increasing prevalence rates; however, individuals who self-harm do not often receive treatment. Mobile health (mHealth) interventions are a possible solution to some of the ...
      • Thumbnail

        Interventions to reduce self-harm on in-patient wards: systematic review 

        Reen, Gurpreet; Bloodworth, Natasha; Maughan, Daniel L; Vincent, Charles (2021-04)
        Background Incidents of self-harm are common on psychiatric wards. There are a wide variety of therapeutic, social and environmental interventions that have shown some promise in reducing self-harm in in-patient settings, ...
      • Thumbnail

        Might Informal Carers of Adults With Enduring Suicidality Experience Anticipatory Loss? 

        Lascelles, Karen (2021-04)
        Carers of loved ones who repeatedly express suicidal intent and/or engage in suicidal behavior may experience a sense of anticipation of eventual suicide due to the potential of a fatal act of self-harm. An understanding ...
      • Thumbnail

        Using digital monitoring alongside psychosocial interventions in patients who self-harm 

        Brand, Fiona; Hawton, Keith (2021-05)
        With more than 200,000 presentations to hospital for self-harm each year in England, there is a clear requirement to reduce self-harm and improve well-being in this population. This service evaluation examined the potential ...
      • Thumbnail

        Self-harm on a specialist adult eating disorder unit: a retrospective cohort study of patient characteristics and outcomes 

        Holm-Mercer, Leah; Kohler, Douglas; Ayton, Agnes (2021-06)
        Deliberate self-harm (DSH) is common but rarely studied among inpatients with eating disorders. We sought to investigate the frequency of DSH among inpatients in a specialist adult eating disorders unit, and the association ...
      • Thumbnail

        Suicide in anaesthetists: a systematic review 

        Hawton, Keith (2021-06)
        Evidence suggests that healthcare professionals are at an increased risk of dying by suicide, with anaesthetists at particularly high risk. However, much of the data on which this is based are historical. With a focus on ...
      • Thumbnail

        Suicidal Thoughts in Patients With Cancer and Comorbid Major Depression: Findings From a Depression Screening Program 

        External author(s) only (2021-09)
        Major depression is found in around ten percent of patients attending cancer clinics. One of the symptoms of major depression, defined in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM), is “thoughts of ...
      • Thumbnail

        Direct costs of hospital care of self-harm: A national register-based cohort study 

        Hawton, Keith (2021-11)
        Objective To estimate national direct hospital costs associated with treatment of self-harm and to analyse whether costs differ with respect to demographic and clinical characteristics. Methods A cohort design was applied ...
      • Thumbnail

        Psychiatric comorbidity and risk of premature mortality and suicide among those with chronic respiratory diseases, cardiovascular diseases, and diabetes in Sweden: A nationwide matched cohort study of over 1 million patients and their unaffected siblings 

        Fazel, Seena (2022-01)
        Persons with noncommunicable diseases have elevated rates of premature mortality. The contribution of psychiatric comorbidity to this is uncertain. We aimed to determine the risks of premature mortality and suicide in ...

        Oxford Health copyright © 2019
        Contact Us | Send Feedback | JSPUI
        Powered by KnowledgeArc
         

         

        Browse

        All of ORKACommunities & CollectionsBy Issue DateAuthorsTitlesSubjectsContributor DisciplineThis CollectionBy Issue DateAuthorsTitlesSubjectsContributor Discipline

        My Account

        Login

        Researcher Profiles

        Researchers

        Oxford Health copyright © 2019
        Contact Us | Send Feedback | JSPUI
        Powered by KnowledgeArc