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Abstract

Objective:

A literature gap exists for interventions to decrease average length of stay (ALOS) for patients with psychiatric presentations at the emergency department (ED). Long ALOSs are often related to sequential assessments of patients with high suicide risk or patients awaiting an inpatient bed. Safety planning may provide opportunities for diverting patients to the community and for reducing ED ALOS. This study reports on the impact of a safety-planning approach based on the PROTECT (proactive detection) framework for suicide prevention.

Methods:

A complex intervention (comprising leadership, governance, and innovation) was instrumental in embedding a new clinical culture of proactive detection and positive risk management through safety planning at Princess Alexandra Hospital in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. Practice as usual continued at a comparator nonintervention site (NIS). In total, 24,515 psychiatric presentations over 24 months were grouped into monthly averages for key outcomes, providing a sample size of 24 at each site. A difference-in-differences analysis across sites, preintervention (January–November 2019) and postimplementation (December 2019–December 2020), was used to estimate the intervention’s impact.

Results:

ED ALOS for psychiatric presentations, patients with an ALOS >12 hours, patients with an ALOS >24 hours, and inpatient psychiatric admissions decreased significantly compared with NIS (p<0.01) pre- and postimplementation of the safety-planning intervention.

Conclusions:

Embedding a recovery-oriented culture of safety significantly reduced ED ALOS for psychiatric evaluations. Leadership, governance, and innovative practices that shift the focus of assessment and care from a mindset of risk prediction to one of prevention through collaborative safety planning as outlined in the PROTECT framework may have far-reaching benefits for patient care.

HIGHLIGHTS

Proactive detection of challenging mental health conditions and collaborative safety planning may reduce the average length of stay in emergency departments for psychiatric patients and could provide opportunities for community diversion instead of inpatient psychiatric care.
A recovery-oriented culture of safety would mean a shift in the focus of care from patients’ deficits to assets, requiring actions in the domains of both leadership and governance.
A safety-planning conversation aid—called 1-2-7—to mitigate risk for suicide in the first hour, 2 days, and 7 days after presentation was found to be innovative and time efficient and supported the guided discovery of hope and reconnection with patients’ strengths and assets.
Patients presenting with psychiatric problems at the emergency department (ED) have a higher average length of stay (ALOS) than patients with nonpsychiatric issues (1, 2). Patient acuity, patient need, and practice-related determinants (e.g., thoroughness of assessment, risk thresholds, and risk management) significantly affect ALOS (3). EDs also vary in the efficiency of care delivery, particularly with patient flow–related bottlenecks (4). Although studies have explored the reasons for the longer ED stay of patients with psychiatric diagnoses, the literature does not reveal any specific intervention that has had a meaningful impact on this key performance indicator. In this article, we report the results of a complex intervention to reduce ED ALOS for patients with psychiatric presentations at Princess Alexandra Hospital (PAH), a large publicly funded hospital in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. The goal was to establish a new culture of proactive detection and positive risk management through safety planning, as outlined in the proactive detection (PROTECT) training framework for suicide prevention (5).

Previous Approaches

The focus on striking the delicate balance between risk and recovery stemmed from the preponderance of patients presenting with suicidal distress. The PAH ED serves >500 patients with mental health presentations monthly, approximately 60% of whom are in suicidal crisis. Presentations range from emerging suicidal ideation, to escalating frequency and intensity of suicidal thoughts and detailed planning, to people presenting after a suicide or self-harm attempt. Thorough risk assessments with categorical risk prediction (high, medium, or low) were used to inform clinical decisions, a practice that is no longer considered current (6). However, only a few effective strategies to conduct risk management and safety planning appeared to be available. Two strategies were commonly used to mitigate risk in the high-risk group. The first strategy was to keep patients in the ED long enough for distress to subside. These patients were at the lower end of the high-risk group and were ultimately discharged home. The second strategy was to admit patients for a longer inpatient stay because the patients were considered at too high a risk for suicide to be discharged, even with community support. Risk management (712) also included family involvement, reducing access to means, and community follow-up with the acute care team (ACT). However, structured and collaborative safety planning to identify potential triggers, early warning signs, and internal and external coping strategies and to formulate an emergency plan was not done systematically.
Previously, the approach to risk management was restrictive and focused on patient deficits. Safety planning takes a partnership approach, drawing on the patient’s strengths and means of personal support to bolster safety, creating the self-belief that suicidal urges can be overcome (5, 1316). This personalized plan allows for positive risk-taking and an earlier discharge for those who will be supported by community services. Without safety planning, it is difficult to formulate an informed opinion on unaddressed risk postmitigation, and patients need to stay in the ED longer before decisions to admit or discharge can be made. We considered it likely that this lack of focused and up-to-date safety planning at PAH contributed to longer ED ALOS and to a high proportion of patients being admitted for risk management. We hypothesized that safety planning upon patient presentation to the ED would reduce the need for inpatient psychiatric admissions and reduce ED ALOS.
In this article, we report the results of a complex intervention to facilitate a safety culture with far-reaching consequences for clinical efficiency. We compare ALOS-related key performance indicators between PAH (the intervention site for improvement actions) and a nonintervention site (NIS).

Improvement Actions

Introducing a culture of positive risk-taking through safety planning was urgently needed at PAH. Given several interdependencies, actions for improvement spanned both assessments and care delivery across the ED, inpatient, and community services. To help grasp and replicate the complex intervention components in other settings, we grouped them under the headings of leadership, governance, and innovation.

Leadership

Produce creative effective simple solutions (PROCESS), a leadership framework that supports complex change within mental health care services, was initiated at PAH. The 3×3 overlapping phases of the model comprise envision (enquire, explore, empathy), enable (empower, exchange, evolve), and enact (execute, evaluate, embed) (Figure 1; see also an online supplement to this article). PROCESS was coproduced in the highly successful proactive management of integrated services and environments (PROMISE) initiative to reduce coercion in care (17).
FIGURE 1. The 3×3 produce creative effective simple solutions (PROCESS) leadership frameworka
a An expanded version is provided in an online supplement to this article.

Governance

We adopted the five-step (report daily, reflect weekly, review monthly, rethink quarterly, refresh annually) proactive governance of recovery settings and services (PROGRESS) governance framework (see the online supplement), which has previously been used in PROMISE to enhance patient and staff experiences in mental health care (17) and to roll out a restorative culture in line with the Zero Suicide approach (18).

Innovation

The innovative safety-planning intervention from PROTECT (13) to mitigate risk for suicide and self-harm in the first hour, 2 days, and 7 days after presentation (1-2-7) was rolled out (see the online supplement). Ten conversational prompts were used to sequentially explore and mitigate suicide and self-harm risk (19).

Methods

Study Details

The foundation of the intervention at PAH was laid in the last quarter of 2019. The implementation plan was finalized in November 2019 after the annual Refresh event (see the online supplement), and the 1-2-7 safety-planning initiative was rolled out at PAH in December 2019. Care as usual continued at the NIS. The ED mental health (EDMH) departments of both hospitals had a similar size, had a similar staffing profile, operated 24 hours per day and 7 days per week, and served local metropolitan catchment populations (with similar demographic characteristics and diversity within the same city). Both PAH and the NIS were within the same hospital and health service and thus were similarly affected by systemwide developments (detailed in the Strengths and Limitations section below). Compared with the rest of the world, the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic was minimal in Queensland, Australia, in 2020, and its impact was similar in both sites.
Anonymized, 11-month preintervention and 13-month postimplementation data were extracted from the journey board, an electronic system that tracks patients as they transition through different teams and settings within the care organization. These data included the total number of mental health patients attending the ED, monthly ALOS, number of patients whose ALOS exceeded 12 hours and 24 hours, and the proportion of monthly conversion of mental health presentations to inpatient psychiatric admissions and ACT referrals for both sites. This study was approved by the Metro South Human Research Ethics Committee.

Statistical Analysis

We conducted t test and regression analyses to estimate the impact of the safety-planning intervention on selected outcomes. Specifically, t tests were used to estimate changes in outcomes postimplementation (December 2019–December 2020) compared with preintervention (January 2019–November 2019). We also tested the difference in outcomes between the intervention site and NIS. A generalized linear model was used to estimate the impacts of the intervention with a difference-in-differences approach. A Poisson link distribution was used for count outcomes (e.g., number of patients), and Gaussian distribution was used to analyze continuous outcomes (e.g., the ALOS). Robust standard errors were used to mitigate the effects of heteroscedasticity (in which the variance of the residuals may not be constant).
The intervention impact was represented as the parameter of the interaction between the intervention site as a binary variable (PAH=1, NIS=0) and intervention time as a binary variable (postimplementation=1, preintervention=0). This parameter was the change in outcome at the intervention site (compared with NIS) after intervention rollout (compared with the preintervention period). A p≤0.05 was used to determine the statistical significance of estimates. Each presentation to the ED for patients who presented multiple times was considered an individual presentation. We analyzed the data with Stata, version 14.

Results

A total of 24,515 EDMH presentations occurred during the study period across the two sites. Data were combined into monthly aggregates, consisting of 11 months preintervention and 13 months postimplementation. The intervention site (PAH) had a significantly greater number of monthly mental health presentations and longer ALOS than the NIS at baseline (i.e., the preintervention period) (Table 1). PAH served more patients (N=517 vs. 438) with a significantly longer ED ALOS (17.3 hours vs. 13.3 hours) and a higher proportion of patients staying in the ED for >24 hours (24% vs. 11%). The rate of referral to the ACT at PAH was lower than at NIS (12% vs. 19%, respectively).
TABLE 1. Outcomes for patients presenting with psychiatric problems at the ED, by intervention site at baselinea
 NISPAH 
OutcomeM95% CIM95% CIp
N of patients per month438410–466517493–542<.001
Patients with LOS >12 hours (%)2220–242221–23.75
Patients with LOS >24 hours (%)119–132423–25<.001
ALOS at ED (hours)13.311.7–14.817.316.6–17.9<.001
Psychiatric inpatient admissions (%)2220–232321–24.37
Patients referred to ACT (%)1917–201211–13<.001
a
Baseline was the period before December 2019. Average LOS (ALOS) represents the monthly mean. Percentages represent the mean monthly proportion of patients relative to the total number of monthly patients. ACT, acute care team; ED, emergency department; LOS, length of stay; NIS, nonintervention site; PAH, Princess Alexandra Hospital.
At PAH, monthly patient numbers significantly increased during the postimplementation period (from N=517 to 563). Despite the increased demand on services, ED ALOS decreased significantly from 17.3 to 8.6 hours, reaching a low of 5.5 hours in December 2020. The percentage of patients with an ED ALOS >12 or 24 hours also declined significantly, with a substantially greater reduction in the percentage staying for >24 hours in the ED (from 24% to 6%). The rate of inpatient admission also decreased significantly, from 23% to 18% (Table 2).
TABLE 2. Characteristics of patients presenting with psychiatric problems at the ED, by intervention site and perioda
 NISPAH
 PreinterventionPostimplementation PreinterventionPostimplementation 
CharacteristicM95% CIM95% CIpM95% CIM95% CIp
N of patients438410–466515483–547<.01517493–542563537–589.01
Patients with LOS >12 hours (%)2220–242221–23.832221–231714–19<.01
Patients with LOS >24 hours (%)119–13107–12.292423–2563–9<.01
ALOS at ED (hours)13.311.7–14.812.210.5–13.9.3717.316.6–17.98.67.2–10.1<.01
Psychiatric inpatient admissions (%)2220–232019–22.262321–241817–19<.01
Patients referred to ACT (%)1917–201816–19.121211–131412–15.09
Patients discharged to the community (%)6058–626261–63.066664–696866–70.25
a
ACT, acute care team; ALOS, average LOS; ED, emergency department; LOS, length of stay; NIS, nonintervention site; PAH, Princess Alexandra Hospital.
Results from regression analyses indicated that, after controlling for the differences between project sites and within the study period, the intervention (comprising PROCESS, PROGRESS, and 1-2-7) at PAH was associated with significant changes in most outcomes. Figure 2 shows the regression results of the effects on ED ALOS for all patients. At the NIS, the ED ALOS was 13.3 hours in the preintervention period. ED ALOS at the NIS was reduced by 1.0 hour postimplementation; however, this finding was not statistically significant. ED ALOS at PAH was 4.1 hours longer than at NIS in the preintervention period. The difference-in-differences estimate of the program’s impact (i.e., the interaction between PAH and postimplementation period) indicated that the ED ALOS of patients admitted to PAH after the implementation was reduced by 7.7 hours (Table 3).
FIGURE 2. Changes in average length of stay in emergency departments associated with the safety-planning interventiona
aCoefficients (representing changes in average length of stay in the emergency department) and p values from regression analyses were the following: for the nonintervention site (NIS), 13.3 (p<0.01) preintervention and −1.0 (p=0.30) postimplementation; for Princess Alexandra Hospital (PAH), 4.1 (p<0.01) preintervention and −7.7 (p<0.01) postimplementation (the vertical broken line separates the two periods). Horizontal solid lines represent NIS, and horizontal dashed lines represent PAH.
TABLE 3. Difference-in-differences estimates of the impacts of the safety-planning intervention on outcomes for patients presenting with psychiatric problems at the EDa
 NISPAH
 Preintervention (M)PostimplementationPreinterventionPostimplementation
OutcomeCoefficientpCoefficientpCoefficientp
N of patients43877<.0180<.01−31.20
Patients with LOS >12 hours (%)22.0−.2.83−.4.74−5.1<.01
Patients with LOS >24 hours (%)11.2−1.7.2512.6<.01−16.2<.01
ALOS at ED (hours)13.3−1.0.334.1<.01−7.7<.01
Psychiatric inpatient admissions (%)21.6−1.0.241.0.34−3.5<.01
Patients referred to ACT (%)18.7−1.6.09−6.5<.013.0<.01
Patients discharged to the community (%)59.82.2.046.6<.01−.6.75
a
The means in the first column represent the mean outcome of the baseline group (NIS, preintervention). The means are based on multiple monthly assessments and were estimated through regression analysis (p values for the means are all <0.01). Coefficients represent the changes relative to the baseline means over time and between the two sites; p values indicate the statistical significance of coefficients being unequal to 0. ACT, acute care team; ALOS, average LOS; ED, emergency department; LOS, length of stay; NIS, nonintervention site; PAH, Princess Alexandra Hospital.
Additional results of the regression analysis are presented in Table 3. The intervention was significantly associated with a reduction in ED ALOS among patients with stays of >12 hours (by 5.1 percentage points, or 23%) and >24 hours (by 16.2 percentage points, or 68%). After controlling for differences between hospital sites and time, we found that the rate of inpatient admission declined by 3.5 percentage points (or 16%) postimplementation. Finally, the reduction in inpatient admissions was matched by a 3.0–percentage point (25%) increase in ACT referrals postimplementation, indicating community diversion of patients who would have otherwise been admitted in the preintervention period.

Discussion

Main Findings

Because of the multifactorial nature of ALOS and destinations for onward referrals, our results must be interpreted with caution. The intervention was complex, and although safety planning was the primary practice change, the leadership approach and supporting governance processes also underwent significant alterations. A difference-in-differences approach is a robust analytical tool, but any cause-and-effect relationship should be considered speculative. Although safer care is the primary objective of a clinical culture that promotes collaborative safety planning, we hypothesized that it would also reduce ALOS for patients attending the ED with mental health challenges. Those scheduled to be discharged back home could leave sooner, because safety planning supported the earlier formulation of an accurate opinion regarding unaddressed risks in the community. This observation was captured in the significant decrease in the proportion of patients with an ALOS >24 hours: 24% preintervention to 6% postimplementation. Not having to provide monitoring for those waiting in the ED allowed staff more time to evaluate and treat the significantly higher number of patients in 2020: a monthly mean of 563 patients compared with 517 in 2019. In the monthly ED PROGRESS review and Mortality and Morbidity meetings, staff also reported feeling more confident in discharging people at an earlier stage. This rising staff confidence was evidenced by a month-by-month steady decline in ED ALOS from 18.5 hours in November 2019 to 5.5 hours in December 2020.
Rigorous safety planning also decreased the conversion rate of ED psychiatric presentations to psychiatric admissions (23% preintervention vs. 18% postimplementation). Inpatient staff reported at the monthly ward PROGRESS reviews how the revamped leadership (i.e., appointment of a new consultant [T.T.], full-time team leader [T.M.], clinical nurse consultant, resident medical officer, and transition coordinator) brought clarity of thought to clinical decision making through an enhanced admissions checklist. On the checklist, the purpose of psychiatric admission for each patient was clearly defined, and, whenever possible, community alternatives were identified. Many patients, who in 2019 would have been admitted to inpatient care, received follow-up care at home with ACT support, the least restrictive setting possible for a psychiatric patient’s recovery. The resulting bed availability allowed the leadership to address a preexisting narrative of keeping people out of the hospital. This narrative was changed to a timely and proportionate response to bring people into the hospital at an earlier stage of deterioration so that their stay in the most restrictive environment would be as short as possible and unnecessary long stays could be avoided.
The safety measures and community flow–related changes are not reported in this article. In brief, they centered on proactive identification of patients whose condition had deteriorated in the community. The transition coordinator ensured that such patients got appropriate help and, if necessary, were admitted to an inpatient stay at an earlier stage, reducing patient suffering by offering an earlier intervention. Previously, by the time patients would come into the hospital, they would be so unwell that they would need longer lengths of stay, affecting bed availability. The backflow resulting from the previous approach would affect ED ALOS because patients awaiting inpatient admission would need to wait longer until a bed became available. The change in approach resulted in both shorter inpatient ALOS and increased bed availability.
The implementation of the 1-2-7 innovation was led by the consultant psychiatrist (T.T.) and team leader (T.M.) of the EDMH at PAH. This in-house ownership of the initiative and the support it provided by encouraging patients in positive risk-taking as part of safety planning was crucial to the initiative’s success. Because this initiative was new, the EDMH leadership also ran several safety protocols, including a daily audit of the appropriateness of all discharges, and provided valuable feedback and supervision. Although the principal focus of improvement actions was on the ED, the ALOS metrics cumulatively resulted from safety- and patient flow–related changes across the entire service. We believe that a singular focus on the ED would not have achieved the same results. A systemwide approach to patient flow that is underpinned in a care culture that strives to maintain the delicate balance of risk and recovery is needed (13, 20).

Care Culture

Our results provide conclusive evidence supporting the hypothesis that shifting care culture by using appropriate safety planning significantly reduces ED ALOS and increases diversions of patients to their communities. The therapeutic relationship serves as scaffolding (21, 22) within which some of the potential risks of this shift in culture can be anticipated and discussed in a supportive, solution-focused manner. Conceptual models like the Care Compass (5, 13, 19) were used to support staff in striking a balance between risk versus recovery and care versus control. The process of shared decision making and planning has required a shift in the mindset how staff work: from top to tap (23). Previously, staff would act from the top, feeling responsible for fixing problems; the new mindset of being on tap brought forth an enabling approach, with an emphasis on hope, which is an antidote against suicide and a vital ingredient for ongoing safety (24). Because of the mindset shift, the top 3 practice changes were prediction to prevention, past to future, and deficits to assets. These changes were supported by safety formulations using the DESPAIR (Diagnosis, Entrapment, Suicidal Thoughts and Plans, Past Attempts, Agitation, Risk Response) framework from PROTECT and clear and imminent risk formulations based on longitudinal risk (a person’s individual risk over time), unaddressed risk (unmitigated risk after safety planning), and cross-sectional risk (the person’s risk compared with risks for other patient populations such as inpatient, community, and primary care) (5, 13, 19) (see also the online supplement).

Strengths and Limitations

In this large study, we tracked the ALOS of 24,515 EDMH patient presentations across two major Australian metropolitan public-sector hospitals. We acknowledge that a double-blind randomized controlled trial is often recognized as a more rigorous tool to establish a relationship between cause and effect. This study design was not possible given the busy, noncontrollable hospital environment and the complex nature of the intervention; thus, a difference-in-differences approach was adopted to evaluate the intervention’s impact. Rather than compare outcomes before and after implementation of the intervention in one site, we opted for inclusion of comparator site data to mitigate the confounding effects of sitewide developments and challenges. These changes included a launch of a police and ambulance co-responder service, an investment in a flow crew to coordinate inpatient admissions, appointments of transition coordinators, weekend discharges, and variations in primary presenting problems because of the COVID-19 pandemic. Both PAH and the NIS were similarly affected by these changes. The advantage of mitigating confounders by choosing two study sites within the same organization was offset by some inevitable knowledge sharing between staff from the two sites that may have diluted the results of the difference-in-differences analysis. In addition, some differences at baseline, including PAH having higher ED ALOS and serving larger numbers of patients than the NIS, made it more challenging to roll out and embed safety planning in PAH. Also, some patients were unwilling to participate in safety planning, or it was not clinically indicated.
Because this study focused on patient flow metrics, patient and clinical variables were not analyzed. Daily intake reviews by a consultant psychiatrist were instituted for quality control along with monthly audits of 10 safety plans; however, conclusions about safer care cannot be drawn from this study’s results. This study was also limited by the fact that we could not differentiate the direct impact of PROCESS (leadership), PROGRESS (governance), and 1-2-7 (innovation) on ALOS. Similarly, the impact on ALOS of improvements in EDMH, which we report in this article, could not be differentiated from the impact of improvements in inpatient psychiatric or community care. We note that because this intervention is complex and spanned care systems, it was not possible to segregate the impacts of the improvements in each area on ED ALOS. Also, given the rare occurrence of suicide and its multifactorial nature, we did not report specific safety data in this study. Instead, to evaluate the impact of 1-2-7, we presented quantifiable clinical efficiency measures, such as ALOS and percentage conversion of mental health presentations to inpatient admissions. Reducing ALOS might have enhanced both patient and staff experiences; however, data for these metrics were not collected. We found that the intervention reduced ED ALOS by 7.7 hours, a reduction that is substantially larger than reductions reported for interventions in general EDs using lean management (25, 26). The reduction in ALOS and in the demand for beds could have been associated with proportional reductions in health care costs (27); however, costs of care were outside the scope of this study.

Conclusions

The suicide prevention training framework PROTECT promotes the concept of relational safety. Staff are encouraged in their assessments to transition from a deficits-oriented approach (“What’s the matter with you?”) to an assets-based approach (“What matters to you?”) (5). The intervention 1-2-7 is a time-efficient conversation aid for busy clinical environments such as EDs. It can unlock patients’ potential to manage their safety and help them reconnect with hope at a time when hope is dwindling. This outcome mitigates clinical risk and reduces ALOS and may enhance patients’ experiences, which could improve future treatment engagement and early help seeking. However, for novel practices to be embedded, a concurrent culture change is needed. This change was achieved with PROCESS, a leadership framework to create frontline ownership, and with PROGRESS, a governance framework to keep the improvement journey on track.
Using the statistically robust difference-in-differences analysis approach, we have shown that the rollout of the 1-2-7, PROCESS, and PROGRESS interventions was significantly associated with a reduction in ED ALOS and conversion of EDMH presentations to inpatient admissions as well as with an increase in treatment within the community through the ACT. Although further research is needed, we posit that a combination of actions, spanning leadership and governance and including 1-2-7 implementation, can play a crucial part in active risk management that will reduce ALOS for patients seeking treatment for mental health issues in the ED. The safety-planning intervention 1-2-7 may serve as an assets-based, recovery-oriented, collaborative tool for frontline staff who often face time constraints on completion of necessary tasks.

Acknowledgments

The authors acknowledge the contribution of the staff who worked in community and inpatient teams providing recovery-oriented, person-centered mental health care. They thank the exceptional emergency department staff, whose hard work and dedication made these results possible.

Supplementary Material

File (appi.ps.202100659.ds001.pdf)

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Information & Authors

Information

Published In

Go to Psychiatric Services
Go to Psychiatric Services
Psychiatric Services
Pages: 17 - 23
PubMed: 35795980

History

Received: 17 November 2021
Revision received: 20 March 2022
Revision received: 19 April 2022
Accepted: 29 April 2022
Published online: 7 July 2022
Published in print: January 01, 2023

Keywords

  1. Suicide
  2. Self-harm behavior
  3. Length of stay
  4. Emergency psychiatry
  5. Admissions and readmissions

Authors

Affiliations

Manaan Kar Ray, M.R.C.Psych., F.R.A.N.Z.C.P. [email protected]
Addiction and Mental Health Services, Princess Alexandra Hospital, Metro South Hospital and Health Service, Woolloongabba, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia (Kar Ray, Theodoros, Wyder, Morrison, Steginga, Sorrensen, Kinsella); Australian Institute for Suicide Research and Prevention (Kar Ray) and The Hopkins Centre (Wyder), Griffith University, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia; Princess Alexandra–Southside Clinical Unit, Princess Alexandra Hospital, Faculty of Medicine, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia (Theodoros); Department of Health Services, Research and Policy, Australian National University, Canberra, New South Wales, Australia (Nghiem); Toowoomba Base Hospital, Toowoomba, Queensland, Australia (Chiu); Research and Development, Mental Health Foundation, London, and Cambridge Public Health Interdisciplinary Research Centre, Department of Psychiatry, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom (Lombardo).
Theo Theodoros, M.B.B.S., F.R.A.N.Z.C.P.
Addiction and Mental Health Services, Princess Alexandra Hospital, Metro South Hospital and Health Service, Woolloongabba, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia (Kar Ray, Theodoros, Wyder, Morrison, Steginga, Sorrensen, Kinsella); Australian Institute for Suicide Research and Prevention (Kar Ray) and The Hopkins Centre (Wyder), Griffith University, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia; Princess Alexandra–Southside Clinical Unit, Princess Alexandra Hospital, Faculty of Medicine, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia (Theodoros); Department of Health Services, Research and Policy, Australian National University, Canberra, New South Wales, Australia (Nghiem); Toowoomba Base Hospital, Toowoomba, Queensland, Australia (Chiu); Research and Development, Mental Health Foundation, London, and Cambridge Public Health Interdisciplinary Research Centre, Department of Psychiatry, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom (Lombardo).
Marianne Wyder, M.S.W., Ph.D.
Addiction and Mental Health Services, Princess Alexandra Hospital, Metro South Hospital and Health Service, Woolloongabba, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia (Kar Ray, Theodoros, Wyder, Morrison, Steginga, Sorrensen, Kinsella); Australian Institute for Suicide Research and Prevention (Kar Ray) and The Hopkins Centre (Wyder), Griffith University, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia; Princess Alexandra–Southside Clinical Unit, Princess Alexandra Hospital, Faculty of Medicine, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia (Theodoros); Department of Health Services, Research and Policy, Australian National University, Canberra, New South Wales, Australia (Nghiem); Toowoomba Base Hospital, Toowoomba, Queensland, Australia (Chiu); Research and Development, Mental Health Foundation, London, and Cambridge Public Health Interdisciplinary Research Centre, Department of Psychiatry, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom (Lombardo).
Son Nghiem, Ph.D.
Addiction and Mental Health Services, Princess Alexandra Hospital, Metro South Hospital and Health Service, Woolloongabba, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia (Kar Ray, Theodoros, Wyder, Morrison, Steginga, Sorrensen, Kinsella); Australian Institute for Suicide Research and Prevention (Kar Ray) and The Hopkins Centre (Wyder), Griffith University, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia; Princess Alexandra–Southside Clinical Unit, Princess Alexandra Hospital, Faculty of Medicine, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia (Theodoros); Department of Health Services, Research and Policy, Australian National University, Canberra, New South Wales, Australia (Nghiem); Toowoomba Base Hospital, Toowoomba, Queensland, Australia (Chiu); Research and Development, Mental Health Foundation, London, and Cambridge Public Health Interdisciplinary Research Centre, Department of Psychiatry, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom (Lombardo).
Jacqui Chiu, M.D.
Addiction and Mental Health Services, Princess Alexandra Hospital, Metro South Hospital and Health Service, Woolloongabba, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia (Kar Ray, Theodoros, Wyder, Morrison, Steginga, Sorrensen, Kinsella); Australian Institute for Suicide Research and Prevention (Kar Ray) and The Hopkins Centre (Wyder), Griffith University, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia; Princess Alexandra–Southside Clinical Unit, Princess Alexandra Hospital, Faculty of Medicine, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia (Theodoros); Department of Health Services, Research and Policy, Australian National University, Canberra, New South Wales, Australia (Nghiem); Toowoomba Base Hospital, Toowoomba, Queensland, Australia (Chiu); Research and Development, Mental Health Foundation, London, and Cambridge Public Health Interdisciplinary Research Centre, Department of Psychiatry, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom (Lombardo).
Thomas Morrison, M.F.M.H.
Addiction and Mental Health Services, Princess Alexandra Hospital, Metro South Hospital and Health Service, Woolloongabba, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia (Kar Ray, Theodoros, Wyder, Morrison, Steginga, Sorrensen, Kinsella); Australian Institute for Suicide Research and Prevention (Kar Ray) and The Hopkins Centre (Wyder), Griffith University, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia; Princess Alexandra–Southside Clinical Unit, Princess Alexandra Hospital, Faculty of Medicine, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia (Theodoros); Department of Health Services, Research and Policy, Australian National University, Canberra, New South Wales, Australia (Nghiem); Toowoomba Base Hospital, Toowoomba, Queensland, Australia (Chiu); Research and Development, Mental Health Foundation, London, and Cambridge Public Health Interdisciplinary Research Centre, Department of Psychiatry, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom (Lombardo).
Anne Steginga, B.N.
Addiction and Mental Health Services, Princess Alexandra Hospital, Metro South Hospital and Health Service, Woolloongabba, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia (Kar Ray, Theodoros, Wyder, Morrison, Steginga, Sorrensen, Kinsella); Australian Institute for Suicide Research and Prevention (Kar Ray) and The Hopkins Centre (Wyder), Griffith University, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia; Princess Alexandra–Southside Clinical Unit, Princess Alexandra Hospital, Faculty of Medicine, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia (Theodoros); Department of Health Services, Research and Policy, Australian National University, Canberra, New South Wales, Australia (Nghiem); Toowoomba Base Hospital, Toowoomba, Queensland, Australia (Chiu); Research and Development, Mental Health Foundation, London, and Cambridge Public Health Interdisciplinary Research Centre, Department of Psychiatry, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom (Lombardo).
Rosemary Sorrensen, M.M.H.N.
Addiction and Mental Health Services, Princess Alexandra Hospital, Metro South Hospital and Health Service, Woolloongabba, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia (Kar Ray, Theodoros, Wyder, Morrison, Steginga, Sorrensen, Kinsella); Australian Institute for Suicide Research and Prevention (Kar Ray) and The Hopkins Centre (Wyder), Griffith University, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia; Princess Alexandra–Southside Clinical Unit, Princess Alexandra Hospital, Faculty of Medicine, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia (Theodoros); Department of Health Services, Research and Policy, Australian National University, Canberra, New South Wales, Australia (Nghiem); Toowoomba Base Hospital, Toowoomba, Queensland, Australia (Chiu); Research and Development, Mental Health Foundation, London, and Cambridge Public Health Interdisciplinary Research Centre, Department of Psychiatry, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom (Lombardo).
Kieran Kinsella, M.Sc.
Addiction and Mental Health Services, Princess Alexandra Hospital, Metro South Hospital and Health Service, Woolloongabba, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia (Kar Ray, Theodoros, Wyder, Morrison, Steginga, Sorrensen, Kinsella); Australian Institute for Suicide Research and Prevention (Kar Ray) and The Hopkins Centre (Wyder), Griffith University, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia; Princess Alexandra–Southside Clinical Unit, Princess Alexandra Hospital, Faculty of Medicine, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia (Theodoros); Department of Health Services, Research and Policy, Australian National University, Canberra, New South Wales, Australia (Nghiem); Toowoomba Base Hospital, Toowoomba, Queensland, Australia (Chiu); Research and Development, Mental Health Foundation, London, and Cambridge Public Health Interdisciplinary Research Centre, Department of Psychiatry, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom (Lombardo).
Chiara Lombardo, M.Sc., Ph.D.
Addiction and Mental Health Services, Princess Alexandra Hospital, Metro South Hospital and Health Service, Woolloongabba, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia (Kar Ray, Theodoros, Wyder, Morrison, Steginga, Sorrensen, Kinsella); Australian Institute for Suicide Research and Prevention (Kar Ray) and The Hopkins Centre (Wyder), Griffith University, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia; Princess Alexandra–Southside Clinical Unit, Princess Alexandra Hospital, Faculty of Medicine, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia (Theodoros); Department of Health Services, Research and Policy, Australian National University, Canberra, New South Wales, Australia (Nghiem); Toowoomba Base Hospital, Toowoomba, Queensland, Australia (Chiu); Research and Development, Mental Health Foundation, London, and Cambridge Public Health Interdisciplinary Research Centre, Department of Psychiatry, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom (Lombardo).

Notes

Send correspondence to Dr. Kar Ray ([email protected]).
This study was presented in part at the 31st World Congress of the International Association for Suicide Prevention, September 21–24, 2021, Gold Coast, Queensland, Australia.

Competing Interests

The authors report no financial relationships with commercial interests.

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