Article

Policy addressing suicidality in children and young people: an international scoping review

Details

Citation

Gilmour L, Maxwell M & Duncan E (2019) Policy addressing suicidality in children and young people: an international scoping review. BMJ Open, 9 (10), Art. No.: e030699. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2019-030699

Abstract
Objective To map key policy documents worldwide and establish how they address the treatment and care needs of children and young people (CYP) who are suicidal. Design We conducted a scoping review to systematically identify relevant key policy documents following a pre-established published protocol. Data sources Four databases (CINAHL; Medline; PsycINFO; The Cochrane Database of Systematic reviews) and the websites of key government, statutory and non-statutory agencies were searched. Google and Google Scholar were used to identify other policy documents and relevant grey literature. Leading experts were consulted by email. Eligibility criteria for selected studies Policies, policy guidance, strategies, codes of conduct, national service frameworks, national practice guidance, white and green papers, and reviews of policy—concerned with indicated suicide prevention approaches for children up to 18 years old. Limited by English language and published after 2000. Data extraction and synthesis Data were extracted using a predetermined template. Second reviewers independently extracted 25%. Documents were categorised as international guidance, national policy and national guidance, and presented in a table providing a brief description of the policy, alongside how it specifically addresses suicidal CYP. Findings were further expressed using narrative synthesis. Results 35 policy documents were included in the review. Although many recognise CYP as being a high-risk or priority population, most do not explicitly address suicidal CYP. In general, national guidance documents were found to convey that suicidal children should be assessed by a child and adolescent mental health practitioner but offer no clear recommendations beyond this. Conclusion The lack of specific reference within policy documents to the treatment and care of needs of children who are suicidal highlights a potential gap in policy that could lead to the needs of suicidal children being overlooked, and varying interpretations of appropriate responses and service provision.

Keywords
Suicide; children; international; policy; scoping-review; young people

Journal
BMJ Open: Volume 9, Issue 10

StatusPublished
FundersEconomic and Social Research Council
Publication date31/10/2019
Publication date online28/10/2019
Date accepted by journal17/09/2019
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/30397
eISSN2044-6055

People (3)

Professor Edward Duncan

Professor Edward Duncan

Professor, NMAHP

Dr Lynne Gilmour

Dr Lynne Gilmour

Research Fellow, NMAHP

Professor Margaret Maxwell

Professor Margaret Maxwell

Professor, NMAHP

Files (1)