Thursday, May 7, 2020

Emergency Drug Overdose Visits Associated with Increased Risk for Later Suicide

May 7, 2020 Press Release

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Emergency Drug Overdose Visits Associated with Increased Risk for Later Suicide

NIH-funded study highlights importance of emergency department-based interventions for mitigating suicide risk.

Emergency room image

A new study funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) finds patients who visited the emergency department for an opioid overdose are 100 times more likely to die by drug overdose in the year after being discharged and 18 times more likely to die by suicide relative to the general population. In the year after emergency department discharge, patients who visited for a sedative/hypnotic overdose had overdose death rates 24 times higher, and suicide rates 9 times higher, than the general population.

The findings, published in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine, highlight the need for interventions that reduce suicide and overdose risk that can be implemented when patients come to the emergency department.

Read the Full Press Release


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