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S888
25th European Congress of Psychiatry / European Psychiatry 41S (2017) S847–S910
to mention that one-third of this population did not meet criteria
for any mental disorder.
Disclosure of interest
The authors have not supplied their decla-
ration of competing interest.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.eurpsy.2017.01.1799EV1470
Suicide sleep monitoring (SSleeM): A
feasibility and acceptability study of a
wearable sleep tracking monitoring
device in suicide attempters
E. Guillodo
1 ,∗
, S. Berrouiguet
1, M. Simonnet
2, I. Conejero
3,
P. Courtet
3, E. Baca Garcia
4, R. Billot
2, P. Lenca
2, M. Walter
11
Chru Brest, Psychiatry, Brest, France
2
Telecom Bretagne, Telecom, Brest, France
3
Chru Montpellier, Psychiatry, Montpellier, France
4
Fundacion Jimenez Diaz, Psychiatry, Madrid, Spain
∗
Corresponding author.
Introduction
Sleep disturbances are associated with an increased
risk of suicidal behavior. The evidence primarily stems from studies
based on questionnaires about sleep quality. In recent years, the
availability of wearable health technology has increased and offers
an inexpensive, appealing, and accessible way to measure sleep.
Our aim is to assess the feasibility and acceptability of wearable
sleep trackingmonitoring devices in a sample of suicide attempters.
Methods
A prospective, open-label, 12-months studywill be con-
ducted in the emergency department (ED) and psychiatric unit (PU)
of the university hospital of Brest, France. Inclusion criteria are
male or female aged 18 or over, surviving a suicide attempt, dis-
charged from ED or PU, and giving consent. The sleep tracker and a
smartphone will be given to the patient after discharge. He or she
will receive brief training on how to use the sleep tracker. Patient
will be asked to monitor their sleep during the five days follow-
ing the discharge. The feasibility will be explored by analyzing the
data proceeding from the sleep tracker. The acceptability will be
assessed during the five-days follow up visit, using a standardized
questionnaire.
Results
Preliminary results of this ongoing study show that fea-
sibility and acceptance may be related to technical features of
wearable devices.
Discussion
A better understanding of the bidirectional mecha-
nism between sleep disturbances and suicide behavior will allow
the design of tailored interventions to prevent suicide attempts.
Disclosure of interest
The authors have not supplied their decla-
ration of competing interest.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.eurpsy.2017.01.1800EV1471
Suicide prevention program in the
argentine federal penitentiary service
G.N. Jemar
1 ,∗
, D. Barros
2, C. Cisneros
2, M. Salech
3, V. Gizzi
21
Hospital Jose Tiburcio Borda, Guardia Medica, Ciudad Autonoma De
Buenos Aire, Argentina
2
Servicio Penitenciario Federal Argentino, Salud Mental, Ciudad
Autónoma De Buenos Aires, Argentina
3
Servicio Penitenciario Federal Argentino, Servicio Penitenciario
Federal Argentino, Ciudad Autónoma De Buenos Aires, Argentina
∗
Corresponding author.
Suicide configures failure in the mental health care of persons
deprived of their liberty in terms of detection of risk factors, preven-
tion, specific planning in terms of addressing thoughts of death or
autolytic planning, trends, impulses and moods. The factors that
unite in this catastrophe are multiple and depend not only on
mental health care, but also on the circumstances that led to the
deprivation of liberty, the family and the care of social continence
and the intimate relationship of the person with its existence. Also,
security personnel who take care of people in confinement contexts
have a preponderant role in suicide preference. Structuring the
personality distorted, immature or insufficient, circumstances that
lead to vulnerability and threaten the preservation of life in the con-
text of constant stress and loneliness. The transdisciplinary work
experience provides us with constant review and dynamic con-
cepts and practices to predict, diagnose and prevent risky behaviors
prone to the symptoms of self-injury or self-harmof patients. In this
sense, we propose interdisciplinary interviews of entry, registry for
the detection of risk factors, specific treatment in patients at risk.
The transdisciplinary confluence is a tool to be implemented to
quantify the results and propose to reduce the incidence of suicide
in people in a confinement context.
Disclosure of interest
The authors have not supplied their decla-
ration of competing interest.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.eurpsy.2017.01.1801EV1472
Road traffic accidents and suicide
rates in Europe
S. Kandrychyn
1 ,∗
, Y. Razvodovsky
21
Republican Clinical Medical Centre, Cardiology, Minsk, Belarus
2
Grodno State Medical University, Pathological Physiology, Grodno,
Belarus
∗
Corresponding author.
Introduction
Road traffic death and suicide may have some sim-
ilarity in their psychological correlates; furthermore, road traffic
should be considered as a suicide method.
Aims
The present study aims to explore the relationship between
road traffic deaths and suicides in Europe.
Methods
Rates of road traffic accident deaths and suicides and
gross national income (GNI) per capita for 40 European nations
were obtained from theworld health organization official database.
The total sample was divided on 22 eastern European nations and
18 western European nations.
Results
Mortality rate from road traffic accidents in groups of
all European nations is associated positively with suicides (Pear-
son
r
= 0.45, two-tailed
P
< 0.01) and negatively with GNI (
r
=
−
0.64,
P
< 0.0001). At the same time suicide rates does not reveal a sig-
nificant correlation with GNI. In the groups of eastern European
nations road traffic deaths is associated positively with suicides
(
r
= 0.57,
P
< 0.01) and relationship with GNI is not significant. As
a contrast, in the groups of western European nations road traffic
deaths is associated negatively with GNI (
r
=
−
0.69,
P
< 0.01) and
shows any significant relationship with suicides. Although in this
group, suicides show some positive correlation with GNP (
r
= 0.45,
P
< 0.05).
Conclusions
The present data indicate, therefore, that mode of
ecological association between three studied indices is various in
the different group of European nations what suggests the multi-
factorial complexity of violent death etiological mechanisms. At the
same time, the data allow to suggest that socioeconomic factors are
more essential in prevention of road traffic mortality than suicides.
Disclosure of interest
The authors have not supplied their decla-
ration of competing interest.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.eurpsy.2017.01.1802EV1473
Bridgend “Bebo Internet Suicide Cult”
and ritual violence in Wales
R. Kurz
Cubiks, IPT, Guildford, United Kingdom
Introduction
In a small SouthWales town 17 teenagers seemingly
committed suicide through hanging in 2008 triggering national