safety

HEADSSS Assessment

Author/s: 
Dr Nicola Martin, Dr Louise Ingram, Adam Bonfield

The HEADSSS assessment is an internationally recognised tool used to structure the assessment of an adolescent patient, encompassing Home, Education/Employment, Activities, Drugs, Sex and relationships, Self harm and depression, Safety and abuse. The assessment starts with simple and easy questions about life to allow a rapport to be built, before delving into more personal and embarrassing aspects.

The assessment does not necessarily have to be completed in one sitting, it may take multiple conversations to build up the trust for the young person to disclose such personal information to you. Once a HEADSSS assessment is completed, it is important to document your findings in the notes and communicate appropriate information to other members of the healthcare team. Follow through on any offers of help or support you have made.

If concerns about the young person’s safety have been raised, you must explain to them that you need to pass that information on to the relevant agency. Reassure them that the main priority is their safety and establish what they will do in the meantime to help keep themselves safe.

Clinical Approaches to the Prevention of Firearm-Related Injury

Author/s: 
Patrick M Carter, Rebecca M Cunningham

Firearm-related injuries are an urgent health crisis in the United States, with firearm-related deaths surpassing deaths from motor vehicle crashes in 2017.1 In contrast to other conditions for which clinicians have evidence-based solutions to reduce harm, the 25-year gap in federal research funding2,3 halted substantial advances in the science of firearm-related injury prevention. Yet renewed funding and emerging science continue to highlight the critical role clinicians have in prevention efforts.2,3 Similar to other complex health issues, firearm-related injury is heterogeneous, with multiple causes (Figure 1). Each of these causes has entry points within clinical encounters that represent opportunities to interact, interrupt, and prevent negative outcomes.

The lack of research has resulted in a generation of clinicians currently lacking the training necessary to implement the solutions generated by recent science. As a result, despite clinicians recognizing the need for prevention and agreeing that prevention of firearm-related injury is within their scope of practice,13 few deliver evidence-based interventions even though their patients find such measures acceptable within the context of clinical care.14 This lack of training is compounded by a shortage of adequate health care infrastructure necessary to support the integration of useful approaches into practice. Clinicians note multiple barriers, including a lack of knowledge, guidelines, time, clinical support, and reimbursement, as well as a fear of offending patients or encountering legal trouble.15-17

Clinicians routinely provide harm-reduction measures and anticipatory guidance for a range of complex health issues (e.g., substance use and vaccination), capitalizing on available evidence, their relationships with patients, and their community standing to promote health and safety. Although gaps exist, there remain opportunities to improve the current standard of care for the prevention of firearm-related injury. In this article, we review clinical approaches to prevention, ranging from ones implemented within individual clinical encounters to ones advanced by health care leaders within the systems and communities they serve.

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