Characterizing suicidal ideation, suicidal behaviors, and service utilization among unhoused individuals using a health information exchange

Author:

Ho Zandra V.12ORCID,Arias Sarah A.34ORCID,Kunicki Zachary J.134ORCID,Sarkar Indra Neil125,Chen Elizabeth S.12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Warren Alpert Medical School Brown University Providence Rhode Island USA

2. Center for Biomedical Informatics Brown University Providence Rhode Island USA

3. Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior Brown University Providence Rhode Island USA

4. Department of Psychosocial Research Butler Hospital Providence Rhode Island USA

5. Rhode Island Quality Institute Providence Rhode Island USA

Abstract

AbstractIntroductionUnhoused individuals have high rates of suicidal ideation (SI) and suicidal behaviors (SB), but few have studied the relative timing of homelessness and SI/SB. Our study examines the potential to use state‐wide electronic health record data from Rhode Island's health information exchange (HIE) to identify temporal relationships, service utilization, and associations of SI/SB among unhoused individuals.MethodsWe use timestamped HIE data for 5368 unhoused patients to analyze service utilization and the relative timing of homelessness versus SI/SB onset. Multivariable models identified associations of SI/SB, hospitalization, and repeat acute care utilization within 30 days from clinical features representing 10,000+ diagnoses captured within the HIE.ResultsThe onset of SI typically precedes homelessness onset, while the onset of SB typically follows. Weekly rates of suicide‐related service utilization increased over 25 times the baseline rate during the week before and after homelessness onset. Over 50% of encounters involving SI/SB result in hospitalization. Of those engaging in acute care for suicide‐related reasons, we found high rates of repeat acute care encounters.ConclusionHIEs are a particularly valuable resource for understudied populations. Our study demonstrates how longitudinal, multi‐institutional data from an HIE can be used to characterize temporal associations, service utilization, and clinical associations of SI and behaviors among a vulnerable population at scale. Increasing access to services that address co‐occurring SI/SB, mental health, and substance use is needed.

Funder

National Institute of General Medical Sciences

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),Clinical Psychology

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