Universidad Autonoma Madrid-FJD
Psychiatry
Enrique Baca-Garcia, MD, PhD is Professor of Psychiatry at the Universidad Autonoma de Madrid and Head of of the Department of Psychiatry of the Fundación Jimenez Diaz Hospital (Madrid, Spain). He has been Adjunct Associated Professor of Psychiatry at the Columbia University (New York, USA). He has written more than 260 peer-reviewed articles, 6 books, and more than 30 book chapters. He has participated in more than 40 competitively funded research projects. He has received 35 awards and distinctions including a Special Presidential Commendation from the APA (2017) “in recognition of your outstanding leadership and contributions to clinical and biological suicide research and mentorship with an international reach”.

Presenter of 2 Presentations

From Ecological Momentary Assessment to Real Time Intervention

Session Type
Mental Health Policy
Date
Sat, 04.06.2022
Session Time
14:00 - 15:30
Room
On Demand 4
Session Icon
On Demand, Section
Lecture Time
14:00 - 14:20

Ecological Momentary Intervention in Suicide

Session Type
Educational
Date
Tue, 07.06.2022
Session Time
08:00 - 09:30
Room
Hall D
Session Icon
Fully Live, Section
Lecture Time
08:55 - 09:06

Abstract

Abstract Body

Suicide prevention remains very difficult to achieve for many reasons, notably because we do not have any indicator of risk prediction, short-term risk factors being little explored, and evaluations being retrospective they are biased. Furthermore, patients at risk are not followed up, because of their lack of confidence in care, stigma, shame. On the other hand, the gap observed during the covid19 pandemic between distress and less occurrence of suicides could be linked to more virtual contacts. Then, the smartphone might be a good tool to stay connected to a protective network.

We will discuss the opportunity offered by the smartphone to monitor patients with ecological momentary assessment, allowing to better characterize their acute states and detect an increased risk in real time, and thanks to the ecological momentary intervention 24/7 availability, improve access to care and better coordinate resources, and encourage self-care.

These tools while offering new solutions for an efficient real time suicide prevention, may also raise some ethical issues that should be addressed.

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