Journal Article Annotations
2021, 1st Quarter
Annotations by Jai Gandhi, MD and Scott A. Simpson, MD, MPH
March, 2021
The finding:
This study examined the utility of the Columbia-Suicide Severity Rating Scale (C-SSRS) screener’s sensitivity and specificity for identifying patients who enter the emergency department for risk of suicide death (the primary outcome) and suicide attempt/intentional self-harm (the secondary outcome). These outcomes were assessed at 30 days, 90 days, 180 days, and 365 days after the index encounter using multiple methods. The C-SSRS was found to be an insensitive marker for suicide death (i.e. there were many suicide deaths after a negative screen) at all time points. Nonetheless, a positive screen on the C-SSRS was found to confer a statistically significant increased risk of suicide death at 90 days and intentional self-harm/suicide attempt at 30 days. Of particular relevance, neither a psychiatric assessment nor hospitalization at the time of the index encounter was correlated with suicide death outcomes, though hospitalization at the index encounter was correlated with a reduction in self-harm.
Strength and weaknesses:
This research starts to fill a glaring need: “real-world” data on the performance of screeners such as the C-SSRS in settings where suicide risk is increased by the nature of the encounter (an emergency department visit). Deaths by suicide were identified through the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment; while this would of course miss patients who might have moved across state lines, this would presumably miss only a small percentage of the total index encounters and is acknowledged within the paper. Suicide attempts or intentional self-harm was identified through the diagnostic code and obtained through the Colorado Hospital Association allowing for identification of these outcomes beyond a single hospital system. This would potentially miss patients whose emergency department presentations were not properly coded or identified, though this is a normal peril for this type of research. What is particularly astounding is the comprehensiveness of this research in the context of a medical outcome considered to have an incredibly low event rate (suicide death). The statistical analysis is rigorous, with an acknowledgment of the method of binary categorization (positive/negative screen) as opposed to a more intensity tiered categorization (low/moderate/high risk). The binary categorization was utilized after discovering the binary categorization performed as well as an intensity-tiered approach (and the data on the intensity-tiered approach is available in the Data Supplement). The paper additionally acknowledges the method of categorizing a negative screen as a negative response to any of the first three questions as potentially influencing the outcomes (as opposed to a negative screen being a negative response to all of the first three questions), though a re-analysis of data with a more strict interpretation of a negative screen did not alter the findings.
Relevance:
Type of study (EBM guide):
Retrospective cohort
The finding:
Strength and weaknesses:
Relevance:
Type of study (EBM guide):
Cohort study