General Practitioners’ Accounts of Patients Who Have Self-Harmed

Author:

Chandler Amy1,King Caroline2,Burton Christopher3,Platt Stephen4

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Research on Families and Relationships, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK

2. Institute for Applied Health Research, Glasgow Caledonian University, Glasgow, UK

3. Centre of Academic Primary Care, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, UK

4. Centre for Population Health Sciences, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK

Abstract

Abstract. Background: The relationship between self-harm and suicide is contested. Self-harm is simultaneously understood to be largely nonsuicidal but to increase risk of future suicide. Little is known about how self-harm is conceptualized by general practitioners (GPs) and particularly how they assess the suicide risk of patients who have self-harmed. Aims: The study aimed to explore how GPs respond to patients who had self-harmed. In this paper we analyze GPs’ accounts of the relationship between self-harm, suicide, and suicide risk assessment. Method: Thirty semi-structured interviews were held with GPs working in different areas of Scotland. Verbatim transcripts were analyzed thematically. Results: GPs provided diverse accounts of the relationship between self-harm and suicide. Some maintained that self-harm and suicide were distinct and that risk assessment was a matter of asking the right questions. Others suggested a complex inter-relationship between self-harm and suicide; for these GPs, assessment was seen as more subjective. In part, these differences appeared to reflect the socioeconomic contexts in which the GPs worked. Conclusion: There are different conceptualizations of the relationship between self-harm, suicide, and the assessment of suicide risk among GPs. These need to be taken into account when planning training and service development.

Publisher

Hogrefe Publishing Group

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health

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