Why Primary Care?
- Persons who die by suicide are
more likely to have seen their primary care provider in the days
before their death than any other health care
provider.
- 64% of those who die by suicide
have seen their primary care provider within one year of death
(Ahmedani et al., 2014)
- 45% have had contact within one
month (Luomo, Martin & Pearson, 2002)
- Primary Care Providers
can:
- Identify warning
signs
- Engage patients in life-saving
treatments
- Provide referrals to
behavioral health
- Connect patients with
emergency services
- Provide continuity of care for
patients with suicide risk
The problem of the suicidal
patient in Primary Care
- Short appointments, pace of
Primary Care
- Hand on the doorknob
comment
- Very little, if any, training on
how to assess risk and develop a safety plan
- Who can go home with a safety
plan?
- Who needs to be
hospitalized
- Asking the question/screening for
suicidal ideation/plan, then not knowing what to do if the answer
is yes (Create
a protocal.)
A moral imperative
- The data indicate that Primary
Care providers need to take action
- Preventing suicide is a community
responsibility
- The role of the PCP in preventing
suicide has been underemphasized
How to identify suicidal
patients
- Screen for depression, every
patient, every visit using PHQ2 with reflex to PHQ9
- PHQ2: Over the past two weeks,
how often have you been bothered by any of the following
problems?
- 1. Little interest or
pleasure in doing things
- 2. Feeling down, depressed
or hopeless
- PHQ9: first two questions,
plus seven more. Question 9: Thoughts you would be better off
dead, or of hurting yourself
- Use the Columbia screening tool
(there is a primary-care specific tool)
- Ask specifically about suicidal
thoughts and plan
- How to ask
- Patient is usually relieved you
asked
- Ask about method and
means
- Ask about any other method and
means, keep asking until there are no more
- If patient denies having a method
in mind, ask If you did have an idea about how you would
kill yourself, what would it be?
Assess risk
- A continuum
- Thoughts with no
plan
- Thoughts with vague
plan
- Thoughts with plan but no
means (careful with this one)
- Thoughts with plan and
means
- Assess risk factors
- Assess protective
factors
Protective factors
- Social support
- Cultural and religious beliefs
that discourage suicide
- Having children
- Problem solving
skills
- Restricted access to lethal
means
- Responsibilities towards
others
What to do with the hot potato:
keep the patient safe
- Leverage protective
factors
- Remove access to lethal means, if
possible
- Particularly firearms
60% of suicides
- This can be a tricky
conversation, be careful how you bring it up (more on this
later)
- Elicit the help of family/friends
that patient identifies
- Full safety plan
- Crisis team/911 if patient is in
imminent danger of dying by suicide
Primary Care
Toolkit
- Role of Primary Care
- Office Protocols/Roles and
Responsibilities
- Assessing Risk/Safety
Planning/Follow up
- Referral/Community
Collaborations
- Training
Source:oregonsuicideprevention.org/zerosuicide/primarycare/toolkitcentraloregon
Research on limiting access to
lethal means in suicidal patients
- Not a pro-gun or anti-gun
issue.
- Important to temporarily limit
access to guns when individuals are in crisis.
- Need to make it socially
acceptable for friends and family members to hold onto a
potentially suicidal gun owners weapon until the crisis has
passed.
- Discourse about limiting access
to firearms gives rise to constitutional concerns and political
polarization (Caine, 2013), often accentuated in rural
areas.
- The culture
gap is that which may emerge between a firearm owner and
the perceived ideologically different system of power that one
encounters in a primary care setting often tied to the idea
of big and more liberal (and hence
anti-gun) government.
Research hypothesis
Discussions that occur in
primary care settings about patients voluntarily limiting access to
firearms during periods of suicidal ideation will achieve successful
outcomes if culturally appropriate messaging about firearm safety
is identified and implemented.
Methods
- Interviews with 39 adult owners
of firearms
- 22 men 17 women
- 5 focus groups and 4 key
informant interviews
- Questions designed to understand
the culture of gun ownership in rural communities
- Conducted in La Pine and
Prineville, Oregon
Findings
Guns are Pervasive:
members of this demographic own multiple firearms, many loaded at all
times, often not locked or not stored in secure locations.
Firearm Safety: most
frequently cited basis of firearm safety has been explicit training
of children and young adults, primarily through instruction from
family members, and secondarily through formal firearms safety
courses.
Firearm Taboo: highly
inappropriate to ask someone where they keep their guns, how many
guns they have, and other details of firearm ownership and safety in
the home.
The above suggests that
traditional, public health driven, firearm safety discourses (e.g.
store ammunition separately from weapons, use a gun safe, impersonal
physician in-take forms) may be ineffective for at least some portion
of the gun-owning population.
Crisis Situations: in
discussions of actual and hypothetical mental health crises with the
potential for suicide, trust in the person asking the individual to
relinquish their firearm is deemed fundamental. A trusted friend or
family member can successfully breach the Firearm
Taboo.
Trust in Primary Care:
extremely
important; point blank questions
about firearm ownership (including intake checklists) or means
restriction from someone who has not established trust are often
perceived as threatening and antagonistic; fear of reporting to a
government registry, especially among veterans.
Suicide Prevention as an
Expression of Cultural Values: optimism about efficacy of making
culturally-appropriate resources available in a primary care setting;
means restriction would be treated as a basic extension of cultural
values that emphasize firearm safety (rather than loss of
access) and care for friends and family.
Message testing for patient
education material
- Three messages tested:
- 1. Standard public health
message
- 2. Culturally informed message
(some of the language suggested by focus group
- participants)
- 3. Combination of standard
public health message and culturally informed
message
- 817 respondents
Findings
- Standard message + culturally
informed message resulted in the greatest likelihood of
temporarily removing guns for family member, friends or self if
contemplating suicide.
- Standard message + culturally
informed message resulted in the greatest likelihood of the person
speaking about firearm ownership with their physician.
- Results strongest for those who
were politically conservative, living in rural areas, and those in
favor of gun rights.
Implications
- Culturally informed messaging
about limiting access to firearms is more impactful on gun owners
than a message that ignores cultural norms.
- The effect was greater on
individuals who more strongly identified as conservatives and who
more strongly advocated for gun rights suggesting that a
targeted approach to this messaging intervention may be most
effective.
- Information can influence
peoples decisions if information comes from a trusted
source.
- Trust can be established when
values are affirmed and culturally appropriate language is used.
Links to Firearm Safety
Toolkit
Source: www.ohsu.edu/sites/default/files/2019-05/2018%20Forum%20How%20to%20Address%20Firearm%20Safety%20with%20the%20Rural%20Suicidal%20Patient.pdf