| Literature DB >> 20955563 |
Francis Mitrou1, Jennifer Gaudie, David Lawrence, Sven R Silburn, Fiona J Stanley, Stephen R Zubrick.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A prior episode of deliberate self-harm (DSH) is one of the strongest predictors of future completed suicide. Identifying antecedents of DSH may inform strategies designed to reduce suicide rates. This study aimed to determine whether individual and socio-ecological factors collected in childhood and adolescence were associated with later hospitalisation for DSH.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20955563 PMCID: PMC2970584 DOI: 10.1186/1471-244X-10-82
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Psychiatry ISSN: 1471-244X Impact factor: 3.630
Population weighted proportions of WACHS children who were hospitalised with at least one episode of deliberate self-harm between interview in 1993 and December 31 2007, by selected items from the WACHS
| Hospitalised for DSH (n = 37) | Not hospitalised for DSH (n = 2,699) | |
|---|---|---|
| Estimate (95% CI) | Estimate (95% CI) | |
| Sex | ||
| --Male | 30.3% (14.3%-51.8%) | 50.1% (48.0%-52.3%) |
| --Female | 69.7% (48.2%-85.7%) | 49.9% (47.7%-52.0%) |
| Emotional problems | ||
| -No emotional problems | 53.8% (35.7%-73.6%)* | 79.7% (77.7%-81.6%)* |
| -Emotional problems NOT more than other children | 9.1% (1.7%-21.9%) | 8.4% (7.3%-9.7%) |
| -Emotional problems MORE than other children | 37.0% (18.8%-59.4%)* | 10.0% (8.6%-11.6%)* |
| CBCL Total Score: | ||
| -Normal | 63.3% (43.9%-80.1%) | 79.0% (77.1%-80.8%) |
| -Abnormal | 28.6% (13.7%-46.7%) | 16.7% (15.0%-18.5%) |
| CBCL: Delinquent Behavior Score: | ||
| -Normal | 64.3% (43.9%-80.1%) | 86.8% (85.2%-88.3%) |
| -Abnormal | 27.6% (13.7%-46.7%)* | 8.9% (7.7%-10.2%)* |
| Ever breastfed | ||
| -No | 12.7% (4.1%-26.2%) | 15.9% (13.8%-18.2%) |
| -Yes | 87.3% (73.8%-95.9%) | 83.8% (81.5%-85.9%) |
| Birth weight | ||
| -Under 2500 g | 0.0% (0.0%-1.3%) | 3.5% (2.7%-4.4%) |
| -2500 g and over | 71.3% (49.8%-86.2%) | 59.4% (56.6%-62.3%) |
| -Not known | 28.7% (13.8%-50.2%) | 37.1% (34.3%-39.9%) |
| IQ score 1993 | ||
| 51-79 | 6.3% (1.4%-18.3%) | 8.8% (7.6%-10.3%) |
| 80-119 | 45.8% (26.4%-64.3%) | 51.6% (49.1%-54.1%) |
| 120-149 | 4.8% (1.1%-14.6%) | 9.8% (8.4%-11.4%) |
| Carer smoking status | ||
| -Non-smoker | 48.0% (26.6%-66.6%)* | 74.6% (71.5%-77.5%)* |
| -Current smoker | 52.0% (33.4%-73.4%)* | 24.8% (21.9%-27.9%)* |
| Highest school year completed by child's carer | ||
| -Year 9 or lower | 16.0% (3.6%-41.4%) | 13.2% (11.1%-15.6%) |
| -Year 10 or higher | 84.0% (60.4%-96.6%) | 85.8% (83.3%-88.0%) |
| Government benefit card status of child's carer | ||
| -No benefit card | 53.8% (36.0%-72.7%) | 62.9% (59.3%-66.5%) |
| -Holds benefit card | 46.2% (27.3%-64.0%) | 36.5% (32.9%-40.0%) |
| Carer reported lifetime treatment for mental health problems as at 1993 | ||
| -Yes, have been treated | 29.3% (12.7%-47.2%) | 11.4% (9.6%-13.3%) |
| -No, never treated | 70.7% (52.8%-87.3%) | 87.9% (85.9%-89.8%) |
| Parenting style | ||
| -Encouraging | 23.4% (11.8%-41.2%)* | 49.4% (46.9%-52.0%)* |
| -Coercive | 6.8% (1.3%-17.2%) | 5.1% (4.2%-6.1%) |
| -Neutral | 16.0% (3.0%-36.3%) | 7.0% (5.8%-8.3%) |
| -Inconsistent | 53.8% (34.7%-70.9%) | 38.2% (35.6%-40.8%) |
| Importance of religion to carer | ||
| -Very important | 16.1% (7.0%-31.4%) | 20.8% (18.2%-23.6%) |
| -Reasonably important | 52.9% (33.1%-69.8%) | 33.6% (30.8%-36.4% |
| -Not important at all | 22.9% (7.1%-42.2%) | 40.0% (36.7%-43.4%) |
| Maternal age at birth | ||
| - < 20 years | 27.5% (11.6%-47.8% | 5.6% (4.2%-7.1%)* |
| - > = 20 years | 72.5% (52.2%-88.4%)* | 93.4% (91.7%-94.8%)* |
| Family type | ||
| -Original | 46.2% (25.5%-64.7% | 74.2% (70.9%-77.2%)* |
| -Step/blended | 28.8% (10.7%-50.2%) | 9.3% (7.7%-11.1%) |
| -Sole parent | 25.0% (9.1%-51.2%) | 16.5% (13.8%-19.4%) |
| Combined weekly income of child's carers (1993 Australian dollars) | ||
| -Low (<$600) | 42.3% (26.4%-62.3%) | 38.8% (35.2%-42.7%) |
| -Medium ($600-$1,100) | 34.8% (19.7%-53.5%) | 38.9% (35.6%-42.4%) |
| -High (>$1,100) | 16.1% (6.4%-32.8%) | 14.8% (12.3%-17.5%) |
| Family functioning (FAD) | ||
| -Good | 87.1% (66.9%-98.7%) | 86.5% (84.2%-88.5%) |
| -Poor | 0.5% (0.0%-3.8%) | 0.3% (0.1%-0.7%) |
| Teacher rated academic performance at school | ||
| -Far below age | 4.2% (0.6%-15.8%) | 2.1% (1.5%-2.8%) |
| -Somewhat below age | 5.7% (0.6%-16.5%) | 11.8% (10.3%-13.6%) |
| -At age level | 37.7% (18.0%-57.5%) | 33.4% (31.3%-35.7%) |
| -Somewhat above age | 12.9% (4.4%-28.1%) | 19.4% (17.5%-21.5%) |
| -Far above age | 0.0% (0.0%-1.3%) | 4.3% (3.4%-5.4%) |
| Metropolitan or rural residence | ||
| -Metro | 71.4% (50.6%-85.3%) | 69.3% (63.9%-74.2%) |
| -Rural | 20.5% (10.5%-35.0%) | 26.3% (22.4%-30.4%) |
| SEIFA index of relative socio-economic disadvantage | ||
| -Less than 950 (most disadvantaged) | 31.9% (14.3%-51.8%) | 20.3% (14.3%-26.8%) |
| 950-1000 | 16.8% (7.0%-35.5%) | 19.4% (13.7%-26.4%) |
| 1000-1060 | 25.7% (9.8%-46.7%) | 30.0% (22.7%-38.3%) |
| Over 1060 (least disadvantaged) | 25.6% (10.7%-50.2%) | 30.4% (22.9%-38.0%) |
* = Significant at 95% confidence level.
Multivariate hazard ratios for hospitalisation with deliberate self-harm over a 14 year follow-up period, for children aged 4-16 years in 1993.
| Hazard Ratio | 95% CI | |
|---|---|---|
| Factor | ||
| Sex | ||
| Female vs. Male | 3.53*** | 1.69-7.38 |
| Age group (years) | ||
| 12-16 vs. 4-11 | 1.22 | 0.57-2.60 |
| Primary carer smokes | ||
| Yes vs. No | 3.02** | 1.53-5.95 |
| Family type | ||
| Sole parent vs. original | 1.08 | 0.46-2.54 |
| Step/blended vs. original | 2.28* | 1.01-5.15 |
| Emotional problems | ||
| NOT more than other children vs. None | 0.94 | 0.27-3.24 |
| MORE than other children vs. None | 3.47** | 1.65-7.31 |
| Parenting Style | ||
| Coercive vs. Encouraging | 2.53 | 0.69-9.29 |
| Inconsistent vs. Encouraging | 2.31* | 1.03-5.18 |
| Neutral vs. Encouraging | 2.79 | 0.88-8.88 |
| Maternal age at birth | ||
| Mother aged < 20 years vs. > = 20 years | 2.70* | 1.20-6.06 |
*p < .05; **p < .01;***p < .001.
Figure 1Unadjusted and adjusted hazard ratios for hospitalisation with deliberate self-harm over a 14-year follow-up period, for children aged 4-16 years in 1993, by maternal age of child's carer.