Correction: The use and impact of surveillance-based technology initiatives in inpatient and acute mental health settings: a systematic review
Jessica L. Griffiths, Katherine R. K. Saunders, Una Foye, Anna Greenburgh, Ciara Regan, Ruth E. Cooper, Rose Powell, Ellen Thomas, Geoff Brennan, Antonio Rojas-García, Brynmor Lloyd-Evans, Sonia Johnson, Alan Simpson

Abstract
Genes, proteins, chemicals, diseases, species, mutations and cell lines named across the full text — each resolved to its canonical identifier and authoritative record.
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsDigital Mental Health Interventions · Telemedicine and Telehealth Implementation
Correction **: ** BMC Medicine 22, 564 (2024)
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12916-024-03673-9
The authors wish to note an amendment to the following text in the original article:
‘[…] This may be an over-estimation because, while the only published study investigating VBPMM’s impact on self-harm reported a 44% relative reduction in self-harm rates in patients' bedrooms on two VBPMM wards compared to two control wards without VBPMM, the actual reduction in self-harm rates on the VBPMM wards alone was only 22% [1]. Additionally, these models calculated Accident and Emergency self-harm treatment costs using the weighted average of fracture codes, which risks over-estimating cost savings […]’
The authors wish to acknowledge the ‘Stop Oxevision’ campaign’s contribution in the context of this text, and to note that it should instead read as follows:
‘[…] The Stop Oxevision campaign [2] argues that this may be an over-estimation because, while the only published study investigating VBPMM’s impact on self-harm reported a 44% relative reduction in self-harm rates in patients’ bedrooms on two VBPMM wards compared to two control wards without VBPMM, the actual reduction in self-harm rates on the VBPMM wards alone was only 22% [1, 3]. Additionally, they note that these models calculated Accident and Emergency self-harm treatment costs using the weighted average of fracture codes, which risks over-estimating cost savings [3] […]’
The reference list from the paper itself. Each links out to its DOI / PubMed record.
- 1Stop Oxevision. https://stopoxevision.wordpress.com/. Accessed 24 Sep 2024.
- 2Stop Oxevision. Misrepresentation of data in Oxehealth research papers. 2025. https://stopoxevision.wordpress.com/2025/01/06/misrepresentation-of-data-in-oxehealth-research-papers/. Accessed 07 Jan 2025.
