학술논문

Association between unintentional injuries and self-harm among adolescent emergency department patients
Document Type
article
Source
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Public Health
Health Sciences
Prevention
Physical Injury - Accidents and Adverse Effects
Pediatric
Clinical Research
Childhood Injury
Injuries and accidents
Good Health and Well Being
Accidental Falls
Adolescent
Adolescent Behavior
Adult
Asphyxia
California
Child
Emergency Service
Hospital
Female
Humans
Male
Poisoning
Risk
Self-Injurious Behavior
Wounds and Injuries
Wounds
Penetrating
Young Adult
Clinical Sciences
Psychiatry
Clinical sciences
Health services and systems
Language
Abstract
BackgroundUnintentional injury, a leading cause of morbidity among adolescents, may also be a risk factor for deliberate self-harm. To inform clinical and public health prevention efforts in adolescent populations, we examined whether distinct subtypes of unintentional injury were differentially associated with deliberate self-harm.MethodsStatewide, all-payer, individually linkable administrative data on adolescent patients presenting to any California emergency department (ED) in 2010 (n = 490,071) were used to investigate longitudinal associations between subtypes of unintentional injury and deliberate self-harm. Adolescents aged 10-19 years presenting with unintentional drug poisoning, other poisoning, fall, suffocation, or cutting/piercing injuries formed the exposure groups; adolescents presenting with unintentional strike injuries formed the primary referent group. Study patients were followed back in time (2006-2009) to compare the groups' odds of a prior ED visit for deliberate self-harm, as well as forwards in time (2010-2015) to compare their risks of subsequent self-harm.ResultsUnintentional drug-poisoning injury was strongly associated with increased likelihood of ED visits for deliberate self-harm, assessed both retrospectively (adjusted OR = 4.52; 95% confidence interval [CI] = 3.08, 6.64) and prospectively (adjusted RR = 3.74; 95% CI = 3.03, 4.60). Positive associations with odds of prior self-harm and/or risk of subsequent self-harm were also observed for patients with unintentional non-drug poisoning, suffocation, and cutting/piercing injuries.ConclusionsCertain subtypes of unintentional injury, particularly drug poisoning, are strongly associated with risk for deliberate self-harm among adolescents, a finding with implications for targeting clinical assessment and intervention in emergency department settings. More research is needed to understand the mechanisms underlying these associations.