Abstract
ObjectivesIdentify university-aged students and contrast their healthcare provision and outcomes with other patients in the same age group attending emergency departments for deliberate self-harm.DesignRetrospective cross-sectional observational study.SettingPatients visiting 129 public hospital emergency departments across England between April 2017 and March 2018.Participants14 074 patients aged 18–23 visiting emergency departments for conditions linked to deliberate self-harm, 1016 of which were identified as university-aged students.Outcome measuresWe study various outcomes across the entire patient pathway in the emergency department: waiting time to initial assessment on arrival at the emergency department, count of investigations delivered, discharge destination (patients refusing treatment or leave before being seen, referred to another provider or admitted to inpatient care, discharged with no follow-up) and unplanned follow-up visit within 7 days.ResultsWe find a statistically significant difference of 0.262 (−0.491 to –0.0327) less investigations delivered to students compared with non-students (about 8% compared with the baseline number of investigations for non-students). Stratified analyses reveal that this difference is concentrated among students visiting the emergency department outside of regular working hours (−0.485 (−0.850 to –0.120)) and students visiting for repeated deliberate self-harm episodes (−0.881 (−1.510 to –0.252)). Unplanned reattendance within 7 days is lower among students visiting emergency departments during out of hours (−0.0306 (−0.0576 to –0.00363)), while students arriving by ambulance are less likely to be referred to another provider (−0.0708 (−0.140 to –0.00182)) compared with non-students.ConclusionsWe find evidence of less-intense investigations being delivered to patients aged 18–23 identified as students compared with non-students visiting emergency departments after an episode of deliberate self-harm. Given the high risk of suicide attempts after episodes of deliberate self-harm among students, our findings may highlight the need for more focused interventions on this group of patients.
Funder
National Institute of Health and Care Research (NIHR), Applied Research Collaboration Greater Manchester