Ambulance clinicians’ responsibility when encountering patients in a suicidal process
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/30495Date
2023-04-07Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
Aim - The aim of this study was to describe ambulance clinicians’ conceptions of responsibility when encountering patients in a suicidal process.
Research design - A qualitative inductive design using a phenomenographic approach was used.
Participants and research context - Twenty-seven ambulance clinicians from two regions in southern Sweden were interviewed.
Ethical considerations - The study was approved by the Swedish Ethical Review Authority.
Findings - Three categories of descriptions captured a movement from responding to a biological being to responding to a social being. Conventional responsibility was perceived as a primary responsibility for emergency care. In conditional responsibility, the patient’s mental illness was given only limited importance and only if certain conditions were met. Ethical responsibility was perceived to have its primary focus on the encounter with the patient and listening to the patient’s life story.
Conclusions - An ethical responsibility is favourable regarding suicide prevention in ambulance care, and competence development in mental illness and conversation skills could enable ambulance clinicians to have conversations with patients about suicidal ideation.