# Emergency care for young people after self-harm: a realist review protocol

**Authors:** Daniel Romeu, Faye Ambler, Cathy Brennan, Judy M Wright, Andrew Booth, David Cottrell, Elspeth Guthrie

PMC · DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2025-099554 · 2025-03-15

## TL;DR

This study aims to understand how emergency care resources for young people who self-harm in England work and why, using a realist review approach.

## Contribution

The study introduces a realist review protocol to explore emergency care resources for young self-harmers in England, focusing on how and why these resources function.

## Key findings

- The review will identify available emergency resources for young people who self-harm in England.
- It will explore initial program theories from international literature on this topic.
- Findings will be shared through publications, conferences, and social media.

## Abstract

In England, increasing numbers of young people seek help from emergency healthcare services, such as ambulances and emergency departments, after they self-harm. One contributing factor is a lack of meaningful and available community-based alternative sources of support for self-harm. It is not clear what helps young people in this context, how or why. This research aims to understand which resources are available in the emergency setting for young people (aged ≤25 years) who self-harm in England, and how and why they produce their intended and unintended effects.

A realist review is a theory-driven interpretive approach to evidence synthesis. It provides realist logic of inquiry to produce an explanatory analysis of how and why resources work, for whom and in what circumstances. This review has two key components; one will identify the resources available in England for young people who self-harm in the emergency setting, the other will identify initial programme theories from the international literature. The review will closely follow Pawson’s five iterative stages: (1) clarifying scope, (2) evidence search, (3) article selection, (4) data extraction and organisation, and (5) evidence synthesis. Published and grey literature will be reviewed and included. Three key stakeholder groups will be involved throughout the review process, namely two patient and public involvement (PPI) groups (one for young people, one for parents and carers) and an interdisciplinary group of healthcare professionals.

Ethical approval is not required for this review. Results will be reported according to Realist And Meta-narrative Evidence Synthesis: Evolving Standards publication and quality standards. Findings will be disseminated via a peer-reviewed publication in a scientific journal, conference presentations, a study website, an animated video shared via social media and other avenues identified by our PPI groups.

CRD42025638539.

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11911665