Keren Skegg
University of Otago
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Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry | 2003
Shyamala Nada-Raja; Dianne Morrison; Keren Skegg
Objective: To examine help-seeking for self-harm in a population-based sample of young adults. Method: Nine hundred and sixty-five participants aged 26 years were interviewed about help-seeking and barriers to help-seeking for a range of self-harmful behaviours. Self-harm included the traditional methods of suicide (ICD-9 self-harm) and other self-harmful behaviours such as self-battery and self-biting. Results: Just over half of the 25 in the ICD-self-harm group (based on ICD-9 self-harm criteria) and one-fifth of the 119 in the other self-harmful behaviour group had sought professional help. Counsellors, psychologists, and general practitioners were the commonest sources of help. Most participants rated help received from health services favourably, however, emergency services were rated less favourably than other health services. Among 77 self-harm participants who did not seek help, just over one-third reported attitudinal barriers. Conclusions: To encourage help-seeking by young adults who self-harm, especially young men who are at high risk for self-harm and suicide, it may be necessary to identify ways to reduce attitudinal barriers.
Psychological Medicine | 1988
Keren Skegg; P. A. Corwin; David C. G. Skegg
In a defined population of 112,000, an attempt was made to discover every patient with multiple sclerosis. Using strict diagnostic criteria, 91 patients were identified. A search of psychiatric records for the same population revealed that 15 (16%) of these patients were referred to psychiatrists between the onset of their symptoms and the diagnosis of multiple sclerosis. Ten (11%) were seen with symptoms attributable to multiple sclerosis. These symptoms were recognized as neurological in only two cases, while the other eight patients received a variety of psychiatric diagnoses. Possible reasons for diagnostic error included the subjective nature of many early symptoms, histrionic behaviour, and psychiatric disturbance which drew attention away from physical symptoms. The results underline the caution needed when patients with physical symptoms are referred for psychiatric assessment.
Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry | 2010
Keren Skegg; Hilda Firth; Andrew Gray; Brian Cox
Objective: To examine suicide by identified occupational groups in New Zealand over a period of 30 years, focusing on groups predicted to have high suicide rates because of access to and familiarity with particular methods of suicide. Method: Suicide data (including open verdicts) for the period 1973–2004 were examined, excluding 1996 and 1997 for which occupational data were not available. Occupational groups of interest were dentists, doctors, farmers (including farm workers), hunters and cullers, military personnel, nurses, pharmacists, police and veterinarians. Crude mortality rates were calculated based on numbers in each occupational group at each quinquennial census, 1976–2001. Standardized mortality ratios were calculated using suicide rates in all employed groups (the standard population). Results: Few of the occupations investigated had high risks of suicide as assessed by standardized mortality ratios, and some were at lower risk than the total employed population. Standardized mortality ratios were elevated for male nurses (1.7; 95% CI: 1.2–2.5), female nurses (1.3; 95% CI: 1.0–1.6), male hunters and cullers (3.0; 95% CI: 1.7–4.8), and female pharmacists (2.5; 95% CI: 0.8–5. 9). Doctors, farmers and veterinarians were not at high risk, and men in the police and armed forces were at low risk. Access to means appeared to have influenced the method chosen. Nurses, doctors and pharmacists were more likely to use poisoning than were other employed people (3, 4 and 5 times respectively, compared with all others employed). Farmers and hunters and cullers were more than twice as likely as all others employed to use firearms. Conclusions: Access to means may be less important in some circumstances than in others, perhaps because of the presence of other factors that confer protection. Nevertheless, among the groups we studied with access to lethal means were three groups whose risk of suicide has so far received little attention in New Zealand: nurses, female pharmacists, and hunters and cullers.
Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry | 1991
Keren Skegg; Brian Cox
New Zealand suicide rates from 1957 to 1986 were analysed for age, period and cohort effects. Cumulative suicide rates were relatively stable but more complex patterns were revealed by detailed analysis. There was a steadily increasing rate in young men and a recent increase in elderly men. Reduced mortality rates in equivalent categories of accidental and “undetermined” deaths could have accounted for only a proportion of these increases. A cohort effect was noted in men, with increasing risks of suicide in the young for successive birth-cohorts born from 1947 onwards. In women a period effect was likely, with increasing rates for all age-groups between 1957–61 and 1962–66, followed by a decline recently among all except the youngest age-groups. These trends in women may have been largely due to changes in barbiturate prescribing. In both sexes poisoning declined as a method of suicide, while hanging and carbon monoxide poisoning increased. Firearm suicides also increased in men. The implications of these results for prevention are considered.
British Journal of Psychiatry | 2011
Mira Harrison-Woolrych; Keren Skegg; Janelle Ashton; Peter Herbison; David C. G. Skegg
BACKGROUND Nocturnal enuresis has been reported in patients taking clozapine, but the incidence has not been accurately established. The incidence of enuresis in patients taking risperidone, olanzapine or quetiapine is unknown. Aims To compare nocturnal enuresis in patients taking clozapine with that in patients taking risperidone, olanzapine or quetiapine. METHOD Observational cohort study using prescription event monitoring methods. Patients prescribed atypical antipsychotic medicines were followed up by questionnaires that were sent to their medical practitioner. Practitioners were asked to directly ask their patients about bed-wetting. RESULTS Nocturnal enuresis was reported by 17 of 82 (20.7%) patients taking clozapine, 11 of 115 (9.6%) taking olanzapine, 7 of 105 (6.7%) taking quetiapine and 12 of 195 (6.2%) taking risperidone. Compared with clozapine, the risk of nocturnal enuresis was significantly lower in patients taking olanzapine (odds ratio, OR = 0.43, 95% CI 0.19-0.96), quetiapine (OR = 0.33, 95% CI 0.13-0.59) or risperidone (OR = 0.27, 0.12-0.59), with odds ratios adjusted for age, gender and duration of treatment. CONCLUSIONS Approximately one in five patients prescribed clozapine experienced bed-wetting. This was significantly higher than the rate of nocturnal enuresis in patients taking olanzapine, quetiapine or risperidone.
Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry | 2009
Keren Skegg; Peter Herbison
Objective: The road to a headland that had become a suicide jumping hotspot was temporarily closed because of construction work. This created an opportunity to assess whether loss of vehicular access would lead to a reduction in suicides and emergency police callouts for threatened suicide at the site. Method: Deaths at the headland were ascertained for a 10 year period before road closure and for 2 years following closure using records from the local police inquest officer, the coroners pathologist and Marine Search and Rescue. Police provided a list of police callouts for threatened suicide at the site for a 4 year period before closure and for 2 years following closure. Simple rates were compared and incident rate ratios were calculated where possible. Results: There were 13 deaths at the headland involving suicide or open verdicts in the 10 years before access was restricted, and none in the 2 years following road closure. This difference was statistically significant (incident rate difference = 1.3 deaths per year, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 0.6–2.0). No jumping suicides occurred elsewhere in the police district following the road closure. Police callouts for threatened suicide also fell significantly, from 19.3 per year in the 4 years prior to road closure to 9.5 per year for the following 2 years (incident rate ratio = 2.0, 95%CI = 1.2–3.5). Conclusions: Preventing vehicular access to a suicide jumping hotspot was an effective means of suicide prevention at the site. There was no evidence of substitution to other jumping sites.
Crisis-the Journal of Crisis Intervention and Suicide Prevention | 2012
Lindsay Robertson; Keren Skegg; Marion Poore; Sheila Williams; Barry J. Taylor
BACKGROUND Since the development of Centers for Disease Controls (CDC) guidelines for the management of suicide clusters, the use of electronic communication technologies has increased dramatically. AIMS To describe an adolescent suicide cluster that drew our attention to the possible role of online social networking and SMS text messaging as sources of contagion after a suicide and obstacles to recognition of a potential cluster. METHODS A public health approach involving a multidisciplinary community response was used to investigate a group of suicides of New Zealand adolescents thought to be a cluster. Difficulties in identifying and managing contagion posed by use of electronic communications were assessed. RESULTS The probability of observing a time-space cluster such as this by chance alone was p = .009. The cases did not belong to a single school, rather several were linked by social networking sites, including sites created in memory of earlier suicide cases, as well as mobile telephones. These facilitated the rapid spread of information and rumor about the deaths throughout the community. They made the recognition and management of a possible cluster more difficult. CONCLUSIONS Relevant community agencies should proactively develop a strategy to enable the identification and management of suicide contagion. Guidelines to assist communities in managing clusters should be updated to reflect the widespread use of communication technologies in modern society.
Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica | 1995
Keren Skegg; Brian Cox; John Broughton
Suicide rates for New Zealanders identified as Maori were analysed for the period 1957‐91 and compared with those for non‐Maori people. Overall, Maori men had about half the risk of suicide of non‐Maori men, and Maori women one‐third the risk of non‐Maori women. Nevertheless, there was a sharp increase in suicide rates for Maori aged 15–24 years during the period studied, with rates for the 1987–91 time period of 35.2/100,000 for men and 6.0/100,000 for women. These were similar to the high suicide rates of young non‐Maori New Zealanders. Suicide among Maori in pre‐European times appears to have been embedded in traditional culture and may have occurred particularly among bereaved women; today the pattern is one of high rates in young men who are likely to have been from their culture.
Journal of Interpersonal Violence | 2011
Shyamala Nada-Raja; Keren Skegg
This longitudinal population-based study examined pathways to nonsuicidal self-harm (NSSH) in relation to childhood sexual abuse (CSA), assault victimization in early adulthood, posttraumatic stress disorder symptomatology (PTSD), and other mental disorders. At age 21, 476 men and 455 women completed interviews on assault victimization, PTSD, and other mental disorders. At age 26, they completed independent interviews on self-harm and childhood sexual abuse (CSA). Multivariate logistic regression analyses were conducted to determine predictors for NSSH at age 26. For men, anxiety and depressive disorders at age 21 were the only significant predictors of NSSH at age 26. For women, victimization, PTSD, and other anxiety disorders at age 21 all significantly predicted NSSH. CSA predicted later NSSH only indirectly, by increasing the risk of anxiety disorders among men and of assault victimization among women. In conclusion, pathways to nonsuicidal self-harm differed by sex. For women there were direct links with assault victimization and PTSD in early adulthood, whereas for men only internalizing disorders predicted future NSSH.
Psychological Medicine | 1993
Keren Skegg
Using strict diagnostic criteria, 91 patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) were identified in a defined population of 112000. Of these patients, 29 were found to have been referred to a psychiatrist at least once. Their psychiatric records were searched for cases of MS presenting as a pure psychiatric disorder. Only 18 of the 30 psychiatric referrals before the diagnosis of MS involved purely mental symptoms, and there was no reason to suppose most of them to be related to MS. This study highlighted the problem of how to define a true psychiatric presentation of MS. The uncovering of two likely candidates among a population-based sample of 91 supported the existence of such a phenomenon, but it was concluded that the only way to ascertain how often purely mental symptoms might be the first manifestation of MS would be to conduct a large population-based study with controls.