Social services utilisation and referrals after seeking help from health services for self-harm: a systematic review and narrative synthesis

Author:

Steeg SarahORCID,Mughal Faraz,Kapur Nav,Gnani Shamini,Robinson Catherine

Abstract

ObjectivesSuicide prevention is a major public health challenge. Appropriate aftercare for self-harm is vital due to increased risks of suicide following self-harm. Many antecedents to self-harm involve social factors and there is strong rationale for social services-based self-harm aftercare. We aimed to review evidence for social service utilisation and referrals among people seeking help following self-harm.DesignSystematic review with narrative synthesis.Data sourcesPubMed, PsycINFO, AMED, Social Policy and Practice, EMBASE, Medline, Web of Science, Social Care Online, citation lists of included articles and grey literature.Eligibility criteriaStudies of people of any age in contact with health services following self-harm, with study outcomes including referrals to or utilisation of social workers and social services.Data extraction and synthesisInformation was extracted from each included study using a proforma and quality was critically assessed by two reviewers. Narrative synthesis was used to review the evidence.ResultsFrom a total of 3414 studies retrieved, 10 reports of 7 studies were included. Study quality was generally high to moderate. All studies were based in emergency departments (EDs) and most were UK based. In studies based solely on ED data, low proportions were referred to social services (in most studies, 1%–4%, though it was up to 44% when social workers were involved in ED assessments). In one study using linked data, 15% (62/427) were referred to social services and 21% (466/2,205) attended social services over the subsequent 3-year period.ConclusionsOverall, few patients were referred to social services after self-harm. Higher reported referral rates may reflect greater service availability, involvement of social workers in psychosocial assessments or better capture of referral activity. Social services-based and integrated approaches for self-harm aftercare are important future directions for suicide prevention. Improved links between social services and health services for people seeking support after self-harm are recommended.

Funder

National Institute for Health and Care Research Three Schools' Mental Health Research Programme

Publisher

BMJ

Reference45 articles.

1. Public Health England . Local suicide prevention planning: a practice resource. Public Health England, 2016.

2. National Institute for Health and Care Excellence . Self-harm: assessment, management and preventing recurrence. NICE Guideline. 2022.

3. Department of Health and Social Care . Suicide prevention in England: 5-year cross-sector strategy. n.d. Available: https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/suicide-prevention-strategy-for-england-2023-to-2028/suicide-prevention-in-england-5-year-cross-sector-strategy#providing-tailored-and-targeted-support-to-priority-groups2023

4. Incidence of suicide, hospital-presenting non-fatal self-harm, and community-occurring non-fatal self-harm in adolescents in England (the iceberg model of self-harm): a retrospective study;Geulayov;Lancet Psychiatry,2018

5. Witt KG , Hetrick SE , Rajaram G , et al . Psychosocial interventions for self-harm in adults. Cochrane Database Syst Rev 2021;4:CD013668. doi:10.1002/14651858.CD013668.pub2

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