[Investigating postvention best practices : The Delphi method]
- PMID: 34642047
- DOI: 10.1016/j.respe.2021.05.049
[Investigating postvention best practices : The Delphi method]
Abstract
Background: Postvention aims to implement services adapted to the needs of a population that may be vulnerable after suicide. While a plethora of postvention programs exist, they are generally based less on solid evidence than on the judgment of health professionals. Using the Delphi method, an Australian study obtained a consensus among experts as to which postvention actions are to be engineered in a postvention program. Since no similar study has been carried out for programs in French-speaking countries, it seemed important to reproduce the same type of study and to compare the respective results. The present study is aimed at establishing a French inventory of postvention actions and at achieving a consensus among experts as to the actions to be included in a postvention program.
Methods: A systematic review of the scientific literature (PRISMA method) and the gray literature (documentation on the WEB) made it possible to identify the different actions that have been included in various postvention programs. Using the DELPHI method, experts endeavored to assess their relevance.
Results: An inventory of 190 postvention actions was established and they were classified according to a sequential axis (pre-event, at the time of the event, and post-event), according to type of action (environment-centered or people-centered). The experts identified 128 actions to be included in a postvention program.
Conclusion: Convergence was observed among the experts, as they identified the practices to be encouraged following a suicide. When comparing the results in French-speaking countries to the 548 actions selected in the Australian study, we observe similarities between the two studies regarding types of postvention actions. This study provides an update for health professionals on the most relevant practices to be included in a postvention program.
Keywords: Consensus d'experts; Delphi method; Expert consensus; Méthode Delphi; Postvention; Public health; Santé publique; Suicide.
Copyright © 2021 Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.
Conflict of interest statement
Déclaration de liens d'intérêts Les auteurs déclarent ne pas avoir de liens d'intérêts.
Comment in
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An answer to M Vachon et al.’s article : “Investigating postvention best practices : The Delphi method”. Reflexions on postvention and its evaluation, and the need for an interdisciplinary approach.Rev Epidemiol Sante Publique. 2021 Nov;69(6):381-383. doi: 10.1016/j.respe.2021.09.006. Epub 2021 Oct 9. Rev Epidemiol Sante Publique. 2021. PMID: 34642046 French. No abstract available.
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