Using hybrid thematic analysis, this study aimed to examine over 2,000 clinicians’ views of what constitutes good practice in mental healthcare services in the context of suicide prevention.
Category: Learning from good practice
Popular
- Assessment and management of suicide risk in prima... 2 views
- Suicide within 2 weeks of discharge from psychiatr... 2 views
- Suicide and accidental deaths in children and adol... 2 views
- Suicide risk assessment in UK mental health servic... 1 view
- Suicide by mental health in-patients under observa... 1 view
Recent Posts
- Suicide in individuals with eating disorders who had sought mental health treatment in England
- Can real-time surveillance systems of suspected suicide accurately reflect national suicide rates? Age-specific and sex-specific findings from the first two years of the COVID-19 pandemic in England: an observational study
- Antecedents and service contact in an observational study of 242 suicide deaths in middle-aged men
- Psychiatric in-patient care in England: as safe as it can be?
- Suicide after leaving the UK Armed Forces 1996-2018: a cohort study
Categories
- Children and young people
- Clinical care
- Eating disorder care
- Ethnic minority groups
- Implementation and quality improvement
- Learning from good practice
- Middle-aged men
- Other research summaries
- Personality disorder care
- Research summaries
- Risk assessment in primary and secondary care
- Specialist community care
- Suicide and COVID-19
- Suicide and economic adversity
- Veterans
Contact Us
+44 (0) 161 306 6000
Recent Comments