Protective factors of suicide and suicidal behaviour relevant to emergency healthcare settings: A systematic review and narrative synthesis of post-2007 reviews.

Category Systematic review
JournalArchives of suicide research : official journal of the International Academy for Suicide Research
Year 2019
OBJECTIVES: Suicide is a major public health concern and, with recent societal changes, such as economic and technological changes, there may be emerging protective factors that mitigate suicide risk which are unrecognised in emergency healthcare. This systematic review aims to identify protective factors for suicide that can feasibly be assessed in time-limited emergency healthcare settings. METHODS: A systematic review of reviews was conducted via PsycINFO, CINAHL and Medline (2007-2015). Reviews were assessed for methodological quality using AMSTAR. RESULTS: Twenty-four reviews met the inclusion criteria, eight were assessed as high quality and included in a narrative synthesis. Known protective factors were identified (e.g., social support), along with emerging protective factors (e.g., internet support). CONCLUSION: The review synthesises recent research evidence on protective factors and discusses their relevance to emergency healthcare.
Epistemonikos ID: 03885c02776a33e5868b3c0c43f84ea54c7ba01d
First added on: Jul 21, 2018