Objectives: To ascertain the frequency and nature of emergencies referred to psychiatrists at the A & E Department of an urban teaching general hospital. Deliberate self-harm and other forms of violence were to be special foci of the study, as was substance abuse, particularly alcohol abuse. Clinical management strategies used by psychiatric emergency staff were also to be assessed. Method: A retrospective audit was made of all of the reports of emergencies written by psychiatric trainees (who were first on call to the A & E) during a six-month period (January-June, 1991). The reports were analysed according to demographic characteristics, main clinical problem, presence or absence of each special focus problem, and also clinical management strategies. Main outcome measures were recorded as percentages of relevant groupings. Mean and median ages were reported as indicated. Results: The 550 emergency psychiatric reports represented 2.2% of A & E attendances. Fifty-two percent were male and 70% were between 15 and 44 years of age. Forty-eight percent resided outside the psychiatric catchment area of St. James's Hospital. Forty-six percent of all psychiatric emergencies required careful assessment of suicidal potential; twenty percent were admitted to inpatient care, 53% were referred to out-patient or day-patient care, 7% to their general practitioner and just 3% to social services. Conclusions: 1. Emergency assessment at the A & E provides a considerable workload for the psychiatric service of an urban general hospital. 2. Careful assessment of suicidal potential still represents an important part of this emergency work. 3. Only 1 in 5 patients were referred on to in-patient care. Undue pressure should not be placed on psychiatric trainees to manage potentially suicidal patients outside hospital. 4. Few referrals were made by psychiatric trainees to general practitioners or to the social services, suggesting that more formal consultant supervision of trainees in this emergency work is warranted.