Risk assessment tools and data-driven approaches for predicting and preventing suicidal behavior

Autor
Velupillai, Sumithra
Hadlaczky, Gergö
Baca-Garcia, Enrique
Gorrell, Genevieve M.
Werbeloff, Nomi
Nguyen, Dong
Patel, Rashmi
Leightley, Daniel
Downs, Johnny
Hotopf, Matthew
Dutta, Rina
Fecha
2019Resumen
Risk assessment of suicidal behavior is a time-consuming but notoriously inaccurate activity for mental health services globally. In the last 50 years a large number of tools have been designed for suicide risk assessment, and tested in a wide variety of populations, but studies show that these tools suffer from low positive predictive values. More recently, advances in research fields such as machine learning and natural language processing applied on large datasets have shown promising results for health care, and may enable an important shift in advancing precision medicine. In this conceptual review, we discuss established risk assessment tools and examples of novel data-driven approaches that have been used for identification of suicidal behavior and risk. We provide a perspective on the strengths and weaknesses of these applications to mental health-related data, and suggest research directions to enable improvement in clinical practice.
Fuente
Frontiers in Psychiatry, 10, 36Link de Acceso
Click aquí para ver el documentoIdentificador DOI
doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2019.00036Colecciones
La publicación tiene asociados los siguientes ficheros de licencia: