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. 2017 Jul/Aug;132(1_suppl):88S-94S.
doi: 10.1177/0033354917706933.

Detecting Suicide-Related Emergency Department Visits Among Adults Using the District of Columbia Syndromic Surveillance System

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Detecting Suicide-Related Emergency Department Visits Among Adults Using the District of Columbia Syndromic Surveillance System

S Janet Kuramoto-Crawford et al. Public Health Rep. 2017 Jul/Aug.

Abstract

Objectives: Limited studies have examined the usefulness of syndromic surveillance to monitor emergency department (ED) visits involving suicidal ideation or attempt. The objectives of this study were to (1) examine whether syndromic surveillance of chief complaint data can detect suicide-related ED visits among adults and (2) assess the added value of using hospital ED data on discharge diagnoses to detect suicide-related visits.

Methods: The study data came from the District of Columbia electronic syndromic surveillance system, which provides daily information on ED visits at 8 hospitals in Washington, DC. We detected suicide-related visits by searching for terms in the chief complaints and discharge diagnoses of 248 939 ED visits for which data were available for October 1, 2015, to September 30, 2016. We examined whether detection of suicide-related visits according to chief complaint data, discharge diagnosis data, or both varied by patient sex, age, or hospital.

Results: The syndromic surveillance system detected 1540 suicide-related ED visits, 950 (62%) of which were detected through chief complaint data and 590 (38%) from discharge diagnosis data. The source of detection for suicide-related ED visits did not vary by patient sex or age. However, whether the suicide-related terms were mentioned in the chief complaint or discharge diagnosis differed across hospitals.

Conclusions: ED syndromic surveillance systems based on chief complaint data alone would underestimate the number of suicide-related ED visits. Incorporating the discharge diagnosis into the case definition could help improve detection.

Keywords: emergency department; suicide; syndromic surveillance.

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Conflict of interest statement

Declaration of Conflicting Interests: The authors declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.

Figures

Figure
Figure
Number of suicide-related emergency department visits for adults aged ≥18 at 7 acute care adult hospitals, detected through chief complaint and discharge diagnosis data in syndromic surveillance, Washington, DC, 2015-2016. Data source: District of Columbia Electronic Surveillance System for the Early Notification of Community-Based Epidemics. Abbreviations: CC, chief complaint; DD, discharge diagnosis; ED, emergency department.

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