Dermatologists' perceptions of suicidality in dermatological practice: a survey of prevalence estimates and attitudes in Austria.

Q2 Medicine BMC Dermatology Pub Date : 2020-09-29 DOI:10.1186/s12895-020-00107-w
Ekaterina Pronizius, Martin Voracek
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引用次数: 5

Abstract

Background: Chronic illnesses belong to suicide risk factors. The goal of the current study was to estimate the rate of suicide-related behaviors in patients with atopic dermatitis, psoriasis, or acne from a third-person perspective (namely, Austrian dermatologists).

Methods: A link to a questionnaire specially developed for this study was emailed to 450 self-employed dermatologists in Austria, from which a total of 45 participated.

Results: Three dermatologists reported more than five patients with atopic dermatitis, psoriasis, or acne who committed suicide in 2017. Seven doctors treated between 1 and 10 such patients suffering from suicidal ideation. These results are suggestive for a low rate of suicidal ideations in Austrian dermatology ordinations. The majority of dermatologists in the sample (82%) knew that these patients are at higher suicide risk. 60% of participants also believed that it rather would not be a problem for them to recognize suicidal ideation. When facing patients in a suicide crisis, reported intervention steps were: referring them to a specialist in psychiatry, or having a conversation about it. In the sample, most challenging about suicide was lack of time and lack of knowledge. Dermatologists were also interested in cooperating with mental health professionals and in the implementation of new prevention strategies (e.g., suicide-related training programs). Analysis revealed that private specialists, as compared with contract physicians, had fewer patients, but spent more time with them. Yet, these differences did not appear to influence the quality of treatment they provided. Treatment quality was defined as the extent to which doctors tell their patients that additional psychological treatments could be helpful and asking them about their emotional state. Female gender and a professional background in psychology impacted positively on treatment quality.

Conclusions: Possible explanations for the low rate of suicidal ideations reported include the advanced Austrian health care system and dermatologists' underestimation of the problem. Implications of the study are to promote cooperation between dermatologists and mental health professionals and to address patient suicidality from a first-person perspective (i.e., the patients).

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皮肤科医生对皮肤科实践中自杀的看法:奥地利流行率估计和态度的调查。
背景:慢性疾病属于自杀危险因素。本研究的目的是从第三人(即奥地利皮肤科医生)的角度估计特应性皮炎、牛皮癣或痤疮患者的自杀相关行为率。方法:专门为本研究开发的问卷链接通过电子邮件发送给奥地利的450名个体皮肤科医生,其中共有45人参与。结果:2017年,三名皮肤科医生报告了超过五名患有特应性皮炎、牛皮癣或痤疮的患者自杀。7名医生治疗了1至10名有自杀念头的患者。这些结果提示自杀意念率低,在奥地利皮肤科协调。样本中的大多数皮肤科医生(82%)知道这些患者有更高的自杀风险。60%的参与者还认为,识别自杀意念对他们来说不是问题。当面对自杀危机的患者时,报道的干预措施是:将他们转介给精神病学专家,或者就此进行对话。在样本中,最具挑战性的自杀是缺乏时间和缺乏知识。皮肤科医生还对与精神卫生专业人员合作和实施新的预防战略(例如,与自杀有关的培训方案)感兴趣。分析显示,与合同医生相比,私人医生的病人较少,但花在他们身上的时间更多。然而,这些差异似乎并没有影响他们提供的治疗质量。治疗质量被定义为医生告诉病人额外的心理治疗可能有帮助的程度,并询问他们的情绪状态。女性性别和心理学专业背景对治疗质量有正向影响。结论:报告的自杀意念率低的可能解释包括先进的奥地利卫生保健系统和皮肤科医生对问题的低估。该研究的意义在于促进皮肤科医生和精神卫生专业人员之间的合作,并从第一人称的角度(即患者)解决患者自杀问题。
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来源期刊
BMC Dermatology
BMC Dermatology Medicine-Dermatology
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期刊介绍: BMC Dermatology is an open access journal publishing original peer-reviewed research articles in all aspects of the prevention, diagnosis and management of skin disorders, as well as related molecular genetics, pathophysiology, and epidemiology. BMC Dermatology (ISSN 1471-5945) is indexed/tracked/covered by PubMed, MEDLINE, CAS, EMBASE, Scopus and Google Scholar.
期刊最新文献
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