OBJECTIVES: : Lack of feeling connected and poor social problem solving have been described in suicide attempters. However, cognitive substrates of this apparent social impairment in suicide attempters remain unknown. One possible deficit, the inability to recognize others' complex emotional states has been observed not only in disorders characterized by prominent social deficits (autism-spectrum disorders and frontotemporal dementia) but also in depression and normal aging. This study assessed the relationship between social emotion recognition, problem solving, social functioning, and attempted suicide in late-life depression. DESIGN, PARTICIPANTS, MEASUREMENTS: : There were 90 participants: 24 older depressed suicide attempters, 38 nonsuicidal depressed elders, and 28 comparison subjects with no psychiatric history. We compared performance on the Reading the Mind in the Eyes test and measures of social networks, social support, social problem solving, and chronic interpersonal difficulties in these three groups. RESULTS: : Suicide attempters committed significantly more errors in social emotion recognition and showed poorer global cognitive performance than elders with no psychiatric history. Attempters had restricted social networks: they were less likely to talk to their children, had fewer close friends, and did not engage in volunteer activities, compared to nonsuicidal depressed elders and those with no psychiatric history. They also reported a pattern of struggle against others and hostility in relationships, felt a lack of social support, perceived social problems as impossible to resolve, and displayed a careless/impulsive approach to problems. CONCLUSIONS: : Suicide attempts in depressed elders were associated with poor social problem solving, constricted social networks, and disruptive interpersonal relationships. Impaired social emotion recognition in the suicide attempter group was related.
OBJECTIVES: : Lack of feeling connected and poor social problem solving have been described in suicide attempters. However, cognitive substrates of this apparent social impairment in suicide attempters remain unknown. One possible deficit, the inability to recognize others' complex emotional states has been observed not only in disorders characterized by prominent social deficits (autism-spectrum disorders and frontotemporal dementia) but also in depression and normal aging. This study assessed the relationship between social emotion recognition, problem solving, social functioning, and attempted suicide in late-life depression. DESIGN, PARTICIPANTS, MEASUREMENTS: : There were 90 participants: 24 older depressed suicide attempters, 38 nonsuicidal depressed elders, and 28 comparison subjects with no psychiatric history. We compared performance on the Reading the Mind in the Eyes test and measures of social networks, social support, social problem solving, and chronic interpersonal difficulties in these three groups. RESULTS: : Suicide attempters committed significantly more errors in social emotion recognition and showed poorer global cognitive performance than elders with no psychiatric history. Attempters had restricted social networks: they were less likely to talk to their children, had fewer close friends, and did not engage in volunteer activities, compared to nonsuicidal depressed elders and those with no psychiatric history. They also reported a pattern of struggle against others and hostility in relationships, felt a lack of social support, perceived social problems as impossible to resolve, and displayed a careless/impulsive approach to problems. CONCLUSIONS: : Suicide attempts in depressed elders were associated with poor social problem solving, constricted social networks, and disruptive interpersonal relationships. Impaired social emotion recognition in the suicide attempter group was related.
Authors: H A Sackeim; R F Haskett; B H Mulsant; M E Thase; J J Mann; H M Pettinati; R M Greenberg; R R Crowe; T B Cooper; J Prudic Journal: JAMA Date: 2001-03-14 Impact factor: 56.272
Authors: Carolyn L Turvey; Yeates Conwell; Michael P Jones; Caroline Phillips; Eleanor Simonsick; Jane L Pearson; Robert Wallace Journal: Am J Geriatr Psychiatry Date: 2002 Jul-Aug Impact factor: 4.105
Authors: Alexandre Y Dombrovski; Luke Clark; Greg J Siegle; Meryl A Butters; Naho Ichikawa; Barbara J Sahakian; Katalin Szanto Journal: Am J Psychiatry Date: 2010-03-15 Impact factor: 18.112
Authors: Carol Gregory; Sinclair Lough; Valerie Stone; Sharon Erzinclioglu; Louise Martin; Simon Baron-Cohen; John R Hodges Journal: Brain Date: 2002-04 Impact factor: 13.501
Authors: Kimberly A Van Orden; Stefan Wiktorsson; Paul Duberstein; Anne Ingeborg Berg; Madeleine Mellqvist Fässberg; Margda Waern Journal: Am J Geriatr Psychiatry Date: 2014-07-23 Impact factor: 4.105
Authors: Polina M Vanyukov; Katalin Szanto; Greg J Siegle; Michael N Hallquist; Charles F Reynolds; Howard J Aizenstein; Alexandre Y Dombrovski Journal: Am J Geriatr Psychiatry Date: 2014-10-18 Impact factor: 4.105
Authors: Amy Fiske; Patricia M Bamonti; Michael R Nadorff; Rachel A Petts; Jeannie A Sperry Journal: Int J Psychiatry Med Date: 2013 Impact factor: 1.210
Authors: Alisa A O'Riley; Kimberly A Van Orden; Hua He; Thomas M Richardson; Carol Podgorski; Yeates Conwell Journal: Am J Geriatr Psychiatry Date: 2013-04-18 Impact factor: 4.105
Authors: Polina M Vanyukov; Katalin Szanto; Michael Hallquist; Modhurima Moitra; Alexandre Y Dombrovski Journal: Int J Geriatr Psychiatry Date: 2016-06-14 Impact factor: 3.485
Authors: Katalin Szanto; Hanga Galfalvy; Polina M Vanyukov; John G Keilp; Alexandre Y Dombrovski Journal: J Clin Psychiatry Date: 2018 Mar/Apr Impact factor: 4.384