Hospital-treated deliberate self-poisoning in the older adult: Identifying specific clinical assessment needs

Author:

Jackson Mariann1,McGill Katie12ORCID,Lewin Terry J12ORCID,Bryant Jenifer3,Whyte Ian345ORCID,Carter Gregory23

Affiliation:

1. MH-READ, Hunter New England Mental Health Services, Newcastle, NSW, Australia

2. Centre for Brain and Mental Health Research, School of Medicine and Public Health, The University of Newcastle, Newcastle, NSW, Australia

3. Calvary Mater Newcastle, Waratah, NSW, Australia

4. Discipline of Clinical Pharmacology, The University of Newcastle, Newcastle, NSW, Australia

5. School of Medicine and Public Health, The University of Newcastle, Newcastle, NSW, Australia

Abstract

Background: Hospital-treated deliberate self-poisoning is common, with a median patient age of around 33 years. Clinicians are less familiar with assessing older adults with self-poisoning and little is known about their specific clinical requirements. Objective: To identify clinically important factors in the older-age population by comparing older adults (65+ years) with middle-aged adults (45–64 years) during an index episode of hospital-treated deliberate self-poisoning. Methods: A prospective, longitudinal, cohort study of people presenting to a regional referral centre for deliberate self-poisoning (Calvary Mater Newcastle, Australia) over a 10-year period (2003–2013). We compared older-aged adults with middle-aged adults on demographic, toxicological and psychiatric variables and modelled independent predictors of referral for psychiatric hospitalisation on discharge with logistic regression. Results: There were ( n = 157) older-aged and ( n = 925) middle-aged adults. The older-aged group was similar to the middle-aged group in several ways: proportion living alone, reporting suicidal ideation/planning, prescribed antidepressant and antipsychotic drugs, and with a psychiatric diagnosis. However, the older-aged group were also different in several ways: greater proportion with cognitive impairment, higher medical morbidity, longer length of stay, and greater prescription and ingestion of benzodiazepines in the deliberate self-poisoning event. Older age was not a predictor of referral for psychiatric hospitalisation in the multivariate model. Conclusion: Older-aged patients treated for deliberate self-poisoning have a range of clinical needs including ones that are both similar to and different from middle-aged patients. Individual clinical assessment to identify these needs should be followed by targeted interventions, including reduced exposure to benzodiazepines.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,General Medicine

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