TY - JOUR AU - J. Marshall AU - P. Oliver AU - J. Hulin AU - V. Huddy AU - C. Mitchell A1 - AB - BACKGROUND: Suicide is a major public health issue. Up to a third of patients will visit their General Practitioner (GP) in the month leading up to a suicide attempt, thus highlighting the key role GPs play in suicide prevention. AIM: This systematic scoping review aimed to explore the qualitative research on GPs' perspectives of suicide prevention in primary care. DESIGN & SETTING: A systematic scoping review of qualitative studies relating to the research question. METHOD: This review is reported in accordance with PRISMA-ScR guidance. Articles at full-text review were assessed for inclusion in the study against eligibility criteria (english language, qualitative research, focus on GPs perspectives of suicide prevention). Data were extracted using a standardised form and a thematic synthesis approach was used to describe the themes elicited from the studies. RESULTS: 2210 abstracts were screened. Twelve studies from seven countries were included at full text review. Four main themes were elicited: challenges to managing suicidal behaviour, fragmented relationships with mental health services, personal attitudes of GPs regarding suicidal behaviour and identified needs to improve suicide prevention in primary care. CONCLUSION: Understanding GPs' perspectives can lead to improved training, resources, and support for primary care professionals, who are frontline providers of mental healthcare. This scoping review suggested there is a lack of evidence around what approaches GPs find effective in managing suicidality and how relationships can be strengthened with mental health services to deliver person-centred integrated care for those identified at risk of suicide. AD - Division of Population Health, School of Medicine and Population Health, Regent Court (ScHARR), Sheffield S1, DA, Sheffield, UK.; Division of Population Health, School of Medicine and Population Health, Regent Court (ScHARR), Sheffield S1, DA, Sheffield, UK phillip.oliver@sheffield.ac.uk.; Department of Psychology, Cathedral Court, Sheffield, UK. AN - 40701768 BT - BJGP Open C5 - Education & Workforce DA - Jul 23 DO - 10.3399/bjgpo.2024.0225 DP - NLM ET - 20250723 JF - BJGP Open LA - eng N2 - BACKGROUND: Suicide is a major public health issue. Up to a third of patients will visit their General Practitioner (GP) in the month leading up to a suicide attempt, thus highlighting the key role GPs play in suicide prevention. AIM: This systematic scoping review aimed to explore the qualitative research on GPs' perspectives of suicide prevention in primary care. DESIGN & SETTING: A systematic scoping review of qualitative studies relating to the research question. METHOD: This review is reported in accordance with PRISMA-ScR guidance. Articles at full-text review were assessed for inclusion in the study against eligibility criteria (english language, qualitative research, focus on GPs perspectives of suicide prevention). Data were extracted using a standardised form and a thematic synthesis approach was used to describe the themes elicited from the studies. RESULTS: 2210 abstracts were screened. Twelve studies from seven countries were included at full text review. Four main themes were elicited: challenges to managing suicidal behaviour, fragmented relationships with mental health services, personal attitudes of GPs regarding suicidal behaviour and identified needs to improve suicide prevention in primary care. CONCLUSION: Understanding GPs' perspectives can lead to improved training, resources, and support for primary care professionals, who are frontline providers of mental healthcare. This scoping review suggested there is a lack of evidence around what approaches GPs find effective in managing suicidality and how relationships can be strengthened with mental health services to deliver person-centred integrated care for those identified at risk of suicide. PY - 2025 SN - 2398-3795 ST - General practitioners' perspectives regarding suicide prevention: a systematic scoping review T1 - General practitioners' perspectives regarding suicide prevention: a systematic scoping review T2 - BJGP Open TI - General practitioners' perspectives regarding suicide prevention: a systematic scoping review U1 - Education & Workforce U3 - 10.3399/bjgpo.2024.0225 VO - 2398-3795 Y1 - 2025 ER -