Characteristics of hospital-treated intentional drug overdose in Ireland and Northern Ireland

Typeset version

 

TY  - JOUR
  - Griffin, E,Corcoran, P,Cassidy, L,O'Carroll, A,Perry, IJ,Bonner, B
  - 2014
  - January
  - Bmj Open
  - Characteristics of hospital-treated intentional drug overdose in Ireland and Northern Ireland
  - Published
  - Altmetric: 2 ()
  - SELF-HARM MULTICENTER REPETITION TRENDS PARACETAMOL PREVALENCE SUICIDE ENGLAND PERIOD RATES
  - 4
  - Objectives: This study compared the profile of intentional drug overdoses (IDOs) presenting to emergency departments in Ireland and in the Western Trust Area of Northern Ireland between 2007 and 2012. Specifically the study aimed to compare characteristics of the patients involved, to explore the factors associated with repeated IDO and to report the prescription rates of common drug types in the population.Methods: We utilised data from two comparable registries which monitor the incidence of hospital-treated self-harm, recording data from deliberate self-harm presentations involving an IDO to all hospital emergency departments for the period 1 January 2007 to 31 December 2012.Results: Between 2007 and 2012 the registries recorded 56 494 self-harm presentations involving an IDO. The study showed that hospital-treated IDO was almost twice as common in Northern Ireland than in Ireland (278 vs 156/100 000, respectively).Conclusions: Despite the overall difference in the rates of IDO, the profile of such presentations was remarkably similar in both countries. Minor tranquillisers were the drugs most commonly involved in IDOs. National campaigns are required to address the availability and misuse of minor tranquillisers, both prescribed and non-prescribed.
  - 10.1136/bmjopen-2014-005557
DA  - 2014/01
ER  - 
@article{V271354490,
   = {Griffin,  E and Corcoran,  P and Cassidy,  L and O'Carroll,  A and Perry,  IJ and Bonner,  B },
   = {2014},
   = {January},
   = {Bmj Open},
   = {Characteristics of hospital-treated intentional drug overdose in Ireland and Northern Ireland},
   = {Published},
   = {Altmetric: 2 ()},
   = {SELF-HARM MULTICENTER REPETITION TRENDS PARACETAMOL PREVALENCE SUICIDE ENGLAND PERIOD RATES},
   = {4},
   = {{Objectives: This study compared the profile of intentional drug overdoses (IDOs) presenting to emergency departments in Ireland and in the Western Trust Area of Northern Ireland between 2007 and 2012. Specifically the study aimed to compare characteristics of the patients involved, to explore the factors associated with repeated IDO and to report the prescription rates of common drug types in the population.Methods: We utilised data from two comparable registries which monitor the incidence of hospital-treated self-harm, recording data from deliberate self-harm presentations involving an IDO to all hospital emergency departments for the period 1 January 2007 to 31 December 2012.Results: Between 2007 and 2012 the registries recorded 56 494 self-harm presentations involving an IDO. The study showed that hospital-treated IDO was almost twice as common in Northern Ireland than in Ireland (278 vs 156/100 000, respectively).Conclusions: Despite the overall difference in the rates of IDO, the profile of such presentations was remarkably similar in both countries. Minor tranquillisers were the drugs most commonly involved in IDOs. National campaigns are required to address the availability and misuse of minor tranquillisers, both prescribed and non-prescribed.}},
   = {10.1136/bmjopen-2014-005557},
  source = {IRIS}
}
AUTHORSGriffin, E,Corcoran, P,Cassidy, L,O'Carroll, A,Perry, IJ,Bonner, B
YEAR2014
MONTHJanuary
JOURNAL_CODEBmj Open
TITLECharacteristics of hospital-treated intentional drug overdose in Ireland and Northern Ireland
STATUSPublished
TIMES_CITEDAltmetric: 2 ()
SEARCH_KEYWORDSELF-HARM MULTICENTER REPETITION TRENDS PARACETAMOL PREVALENCE SUICIDE ENGLAND PERIOD RATES
VOLUME4
ISSUE
START_PAGE
END_PAGE
ABSTRACTObjectives: This study compared the profile of intentional drug overdoses (IDOs) presenting to emergency departments in Ireland and in the Western Trust Area of Northern Ireland between 2007 and 2012. Specifically the study aimed to compare characteristics of the patients involved, to explore the factors associated with repeated IDO and to report the prescription rates of common drug types in the population.Methods: We utilised data from two comparable registries which monitor the incidence of hospital-treated self-harm, recording data from deliberate self-harm presentations involving an IDO to all hospital emergency departments for the period 1 January 2007 to 31 December 2012.Results: Between 2007 and 2012 the registries recorded 56 494 self-harm presentations involving an IDO. The study showed that hospital-treated IDO was almost twice as common in Northern Ireland than in Ireland (278 vs 156/100 000, respectively).Conclusions: Despite the overall difference in the rates of IDO, the profile of such presentations was remarkably similar in both countries. Minor tranquillisers were the drugs most commonly involved in IDOs. National campaigns are required to address the availability and misuse of minor tranquillisers, both prescribed and non-prescribed.
PUBLISHER_LOCATION
ISBN_ISSN
EDITION
URL
DOI_LINK10.1136/bmjopen-2014-005557
FUNDING_BODY
GRANT_DETAILS