探索全科医生对年轻人自残行为的管理:定性研究

IF 3 3区 医学 Q2 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
Faraz Mughal, Benjamin Saunders, Martyn Lewis, Christopher J. Armitage, Lisa Dikomitis, Gillian Lancaster, Ellen Townsend, Carolyn A. Chew-Graham
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景全科医生(GPs)是对自我伤害后的年轻人进行一线评估和治疗的关键。年轻人重视由全科医生主导的自残护理,但全科医生如何管理自残后的年轻人却鲜为人知。 目的 本研究旨在了解全科医生对年轻人自残的处理方法,并探讨他们对如何帮助年轻人避免再次自残的看法。 方法 我们于 2021 年对英格兰国民健康服务机构的全科医生进行了半结构化访谈。全科医生是从四个地理分布广泛的临床研究网络和一个专业兴趣小组中招募的。采用反思性主题分析法对数据进行分析。该研究的患者和公众参与小组以及实践社区小组为参与者招募和数据分析提供了支持。 结果 进行了 15 次访谈,参与者的平均年龄为 41 岁,实践经验从 1 年到 22 年不等。共产生了四个主题全科医生对自我伤害的理解;管理自我伤害的方法;COVID-19 对自我伤害咨询的影响;以及避免未来自我伤害的方法。 结论 临床环境中对自我伤害的消极态度有据可查,但全科医生表示,他们认真对待自我伤害,倾听年轻人的心声,在遇到问题时寻求专家支持,并介绍了帮助年轻人避免自我伤害的适当方法。全科医生认为,以关系为基础的护理是自残护理的一个重要因素,但他们担心针对自残的远程会诊可能会妨碍这一点。有必要采取由全科医生主导的简短干预措施,以减少青少年重复自残。 患者和公众的贡献 由16-25岁有自我伤害亲身经历的年轻人以及有自我伤害经历的年轻人的父母和照顾者组成的研究咨询小组设计了本研究的招募海报,为其主题指南提供了信息,并对研究结果做出了贡献。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Exploring General Practitioners' Management of Self-Harm in Young People: A Qualitative Study

Exploring General Practitioners' Management of Self-Harm in Young People: A Qualitative Study

Background

General practitioners (GPs) are key to the frontline assessment and treatment of young people after self-harm. Young people value GP-led self-harm care, but little is known about how GPs manage young people after self-harm.

Aim

This study aimed to understand the approaches of GPs to self-harm in young people and explore their perspectives on ways they might help young people avoid repeat self-harm.

Methods

We conducted semi-structured interviews with GPs from the National Health Service in England in 2021. GPs were recruited from four geographically spread clinical research networks and a professional special interest group. Data were analysed using reflexive thematic analysis. The study's patient and public involvement and community of practice groups supported participant recruitment and data analysis.

Results

Fifteen interviews were undertaken with a mean age of participants being 41 years and a breadth of experience in practice ranging from 1 to 22 years. Four themes were generated: GPs' understanding of self-harm; approaches to managing self-harm; impact of COVID-19 on consultations about self-harm; and ways to avoid future self-harm.

Conclusion

Negative attitudes towards self-harm within clinical settings are well documented, but GPs said they took self-harm seriously, listened to young people, sought specialist support when concerned and described appropriate ways to help young people avoid self-harm. GPs felt that relationship-based care is an important element of self-harm care but feared remote consultations for self-harm may impede on this. There is a need for brief GP-led interventions to reduce repeat self-harm in young people.

Patient and Public Contribution

A study advisory group consisting of young people aged 16–25 years with personal experience of self-harm and parents and carers of young people who have self-harmed designed the recruitment poster of this study, informed its topic guide and contributed to its findings.

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来源期刊
Health Expectations
Health Expectations 医学-公共卫生、环境卫生与职业卫生
CiteScore
5.20
自引率
9.40%
发文量
251
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Health Expectations promotes critical thinking and informed debate about all aspects of patient and public involvement and engagement (PPIE) in health and social care, health policy and health services research including: • Person-centred care and quality improvement • Patients'' participation in decisions about disease prevention and management • Public perceptions of health services • Citizen involvement in health care policy making and priority-setting • Methods for monitoring and evaluating participation • Empowerment and consumerism • Patients'' role in safety and quality • Patient and public role in health services research • Co-production (researchers working with patients and the public) of research, health care and policy Health Expectations is a quarterly, peer-reviewed journal publishing original research, review articles and critical commentaries. It includes papers which clarify concepts, develop theories, and critically analyse and evaluate specific policies and practices. The Journal provides an inter-disciplinary and international forum in which researchers (including PPIE researchers) from a range of backgrounds and expertise can present their work to other researchers, policy-makers, health care professionals, managers, patients and consumer advocates.
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