Self-harm hospitalizes 17,000 a year: report
CBC News
Posted: Jun 8, 2011 3:27 PM ET
Last Updated: Jun 8, 2011 10:05 PM ET
Related
Related Links
External Links
(Note:CBC does not endorse and is not responsible for the content of external links.)
More than 45 Canadians are hospitalized every day due to self-injury and many of those are 15 to 19 years old, according to a new report.
The Canadian Institute for Health Information released the report on measuring mental health services on Wednesday.
It showed that in 2009–2010, about 140 Canadians per 100,000 were cared for in an emergency department, admitted to a general hospital or died from self-inflicted injuries, compared with 124 per 100,000 hospitalized because of a stroke. "Mental health–related indicators tell us not just about the use of general hospital services, but about broader access to care and support across the system," said Chantal Couris, senior researcher of health system performance at CIHI.
"Readmission rates, for example, are measures of the coordination and continuity of mental health services. Not all readmissions can be avoided, but ensuring that community services are available for people after they leave the hospital may help prevent the so-called revolving door of hospitalization for those living with a mental illness."
About 41 per cent of mental health readmissions occurred within seven days, and almost two-thirds, 64 per cent, took place within 14 days of discharge.
Readmission was more likely when the initial hospitalization was for schizophrenia (13.2 per cent) or a personality disorder (13.1 per cent) than when it was for an anxiety disorder (8.9 per cent).
Finding help outside of hospital
The risk of suicide among those who injure themselves is 100 times higher than for the general population, according to the report. iStock Kym Boulay, 29, of Winnipeg recalls how she deliberately burned herself. Apart from a hospital, there weren't any places to go for help, and she tried to kill herself 15 times from the age of 15 to 24.
"I felt numb a lot of times, and I just needed a place to feel pain," said Boulay, who now spends most of her time counselling at a mood disorders centre to use her painful experience to try to help others escape the destructive cycle of self-abuse.
The report also shows a need for more community-based services, said chief psychiatrist Dr. Marshall Korenblum at the Hincks-Dellcrest Centre in Toronto.
"What this report shows is that there is terrible integration between admission and post-admission care," said Korenblum. "So, yes, referral to after care support services, community-based services."
At Korenblum's clinic, it takes children and youth up to a year to see a psychiatrist.
"For a teenager whose self esteem is already kind of fragile, their reputation, if you will, can be ruined in a matter of seconds. And then what you do is you get shame and humiliation and then that can be one of the reasons for desire to self harm," Korenblum said.
To help bridge the gap in need, Korenblum suggested:
- Offering more counselling at a professional's office.
- Introducing more home-based services by child and youth workers.
- Teaming up psychiatrists with family doctors.
- Using technologies such as counselling over webcam.
The study found that poisoning was involved in 85 per cent of the self-injuries that led to hospitalization, and nine out of 10 of these were attributed to prescription or non-prescription medications.
Cutting or piercing accounted for 10 per cent, and two per cent were strangulations.
What the report's authors did not look at was children under the age of 15, or admissions to hospitals other than general hospitals, such as psychiatric institutions, Korenblum said.
Canada is the only industrialized country that has no national strategy on suicide and no way to co-ordinate the fragmented suicide prevention services that do exist, said Tim Wall, executive director for the Canadian Association for Suicide Prevention in Winnipeg.
With files from CBC's Kelly Crowe and Leslie McLarenShare Tools
Top News Headlines
- Tories line up to argue CP Railway strike hurting economy
- Conservative cabinet ministers say they're protecting the economy by moving to legislate Canadian Pacific Railway workers back to their jobs less than a week after the union went on strike, while the employees say their right to collective bargaining is under attack. more »
- Missing Winnipeg kids found in Mexico back with mom

- Two Winnipeg children who had been missing for nearly four years are back home, reunited with their mother, after they were located in Mexico late last week. more »
- Bullyproof: One classroom confession
- Chadia became physically scarred after incessant teasing. Her story is one of 150 gathered in a video confessional booth at a Quebec school. more »
- Quebec resumes talks with student leaders
- Negotiations between student leaders and Quebec's Liberal government resumed this afternoon in a third attempt to resolve the tuition crisis. more »
Latest Health News Headlines
- 5 ways to prevent kids from getting poisoned
- Poison centres across Canada field about 160,000 calls a year about children exposed to medications and other household chemicals more »
- Dementia patients may not imagine their future
- Our ability to imagine our future depends on a part of the brain used to store general knowledge, which is affected by some forms of dementia. more »
- Eastern Health to cut hundreds of jobs, Liberals say
- Health Minister Susan Sullivan says spending cuts at the province's largest health authority will not hurt programs and services, despite a claim by the Opposition Liberals. more »
- Ontario knocked for special-needs student support
- The province should conduct a review of how it serves special-needs students and improve a policy to support connections between schools and the community, a new report urges. more »
FEATURED HEALTH
- Missing Winnipeg kids found in Mexico back with mom
- Canadian Everest climber's body recovered
- Thunder Bay flooding causes state of emergency
- Vatican denies cardinal suspected in leaks scandal
- Evolution skeptics will soon be silenced by science: Richard Leakey
- Tories line up to argue CP Railway strike hurting economy
- Remains found in bag on Cape Breton river ID'd
- Justin Bieber wanted for questioning in L.A. scuffle
- Accused in blast that killed Alberta mom handled her funds

