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Understanding the Risks of Recent Discharge: The Phenomenological Lived Experiences - "Existential Angst at the Prospect of Discharge"
Background: Evidence indicates that people whose mental health problems lead them to require psychiatric hospitalization are at a significantly increased risk of suicide, and that the time immediately following discharge after such hospitalizations is a particularly high-risk time. Aims: This paper...
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Published in: | Crisis : the journal of crisis intervention and suicide prevention 2012-01, Vol.33 (1), p.21-29 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Background:
Evidence indicates that people whose mental health problems
lead them to require psychiatric hospitalization are at a significantly increased risk of
suicide, and that the time immediately following discharge after such hospitalizations is a
particularly high-risk time.
Aims:
This paper reports on phenomenological
findings from a federally funded, mixed-methods study that sought to better understand the
observed increased risk for suicide following discharge from an inpatient psychiatric service.
Methods:
A purposive sample of 20 recently discharged former suicidal
inpatients was obtained. Data were collected in hermeneutic interviews lasting between 1 h and
2 h and analyzed according to van
Manen's
(1997
) interpretation of hermeneutic phenomenology.
Results:
Two key themes, "existential angst at the prospect of
discharge" and "trying to survive while living under the proverbial
'sword of Damocles'" were induced. Each of these was comprised of
five themes with the first key theme (which is the focus of this paper) encompassing the
following: "Feeling scared, anxious, fearful and/or stressed,"
"Preparedness," "Leaving the place of safety,"
"Duality and ambivalence," and "Feel like a burden."
Conclusions:
Early exploration of and reconciling of patients'
expectations regarding inpatient care for their suicidality would be empirically based
interventions that could diminish the postdischarge risk for further suicide attempts. |
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ISSN: | 0227-5910 2151-2396 |
DOI: | 10.1027/0227-5910/a000096 |