# Prevalence of self-harm across urgent and emergency care settings among young people and factors associated with reattendance: protocol for a prospective cohort study

**Authors:** Daniel Romeu, Samuel Relton, Christopher Burton, Annabel Crum, Emily V Chambers, David Cottrell, Elspeth Guthrie

PMC · DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2025-114062 · BMJ Open · 2026-01-21

## TL;DR

This study will examine how often young people visit urgent care services after self-harm and identify factors linked to repeat visits.

## Contribution

The study introduces a system-level analysis of UEC service use patterns and reattendance among young people following self-harm.

## Key findings

- The study will quantify the prevalence of self-harm presentations across different UEC settings.
- It will examine factors associated with emergency department reattendance at 3 and 12 months.
- The research will assess the proportion of NHS 111 and ambulance contacts that result in ED attendance within 24 hours.

## Abstract

Self-harm represents a significant public health concern and is a common reason for contact with urgent and emergency care (UEC) services among young people. Although young people frequently interact with multiple components of the urgent care system following self-harm, there is limited system-level evidence describing patterns of service use, transitions between services and repeat emergency department (ED) attendance. An improved understanding of how young people use UEC services after self-harm is needed to inform the design of more effective and appropriate care pathways.

This protocol describes a prospective cohort study using an extract from the Centre for URgent and Emergency care research database (CUREd+) research database, which comprises routinely collected, linked healthcare data from the National Health Service 111 (NHS 111), ambulance services, urgent care centres, walk-in centres and EDs across Yorkshire and the Humber, England. The study population will include young people aged ≤25 years presenting to UEC services between April 2019 and March 2022 with self-harm coded as the reason for attendance. Analyses will describe the prevalence of self-harm presentations across UEC settings, quantify the proportion of NHS 111 and ambulance contacts resulting in ED attendance within 24 hours and examine factors associated with ED reattendance at 3 and 12 months. Mixed-effects logistic regression models will be used to account for repeated attendances, confounding variables and temporal variation, including changes related to the COVID-19 pandemic. Anticipated analysis period: January 2026–January 2027.

Ethical approval has been granted by the University of Leeds (MREC 22-079 Amd1) and the University of Sheffield (Ref 068194). The CUREd+ research database operates under Research Ethics Committee approval (23/YH/0079) and Confidentiality Advisory Group approval (18/CAG/0126). Individual consent is not required as all data are pseudonymised at source. Findings will be disseminated through peer-reviewed publications, conference presentations and public-facing outputs coproduced with patient and public involvement groups.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Self (MESH:D012652), mental distress (MESH:D012128), ED (MESH:D004630), COVID-19 (MESH:D000086382), injury (MESH:D014947), Deaths (MESH:D003643), Crisis (MESH:D001752), poisoning (MESH:D011041), mental illness (MESH:D001523), mental health disorders (OMIM:603663)
- **Chemicals:** UEC (-)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## References

28 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12829348/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12829348