Literature DB >> 23088376

Mental disorder comorbidity and suicide among 2.96 million men receiving care in the Veterans Health Administration health system.

Kenneth R Conner1, Amy S Bohnert, John F McCarthy, Marcia Valenstein, Robert Bossarte, Rosalinda Ignacio, Naiji Lu, Mark A Ilgen.   

Abstract

Comorbid mental disorders are common among suicide decedents. It is unclear if mental disorders in combination confer additive risk for suicide, in other words, if risk associated with two disorders is approximately the sum of the risk conferred by each disorder considered separately, or if there are departures from additivity such that the combined risk is less (i.e., subadditive) or more than additive (i.e., synergistic). Using a retrospective cohort design, all male Department of Veterans Affairs, Veterans Health Administration (VHA) service users who utilized VHA services in fiscal year (FY) 1999 and were alive at the start or FY 2000 (N = 2,962,810) were analyzed. Individuals were followed until death or the end of FY 2006. Using the VHA National Patient Care Database, diagnoses of mental disorders in FY 1999 were grouped into six categories (e.g., posttraumatic stress disorder). In proportional hazards models, 2-way interactions between disorders were used to examine departures from additive risk. There were 7,426 suicide deaths in the study period. Two-way interaction tests were nearly all statistically significant, indicating departures from additivity, and the results of these tests were consistent with subadditive risk. Sensitivity analyses examining the first year of follow-up showed similar results. Subadditive risk may be explained by factors that serve to lower the increased risk associated with a comorbid diagnosis, which may include common underlying causes of mental disorders, difficulties of differential diagnosis, the nature of etiological relationships between mental disorders, and intensive clinical care and monitoring of patients with comorbidity. 2013 APA, all rights reserved

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Year:  2012        PMID: 23088376     DOI: 10.1037/a0030163

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Abnorm Psychol        ISSN: 0021-843X


  23 in total

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3.  Mild Traumatic Brain Injury Burden Moderates the Relationship Between Cognitive Functioning and Suicidality in Iraq/Afghanistan-Era Veterans.

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5.  Characteristics of Veteran and Civilian Suicide Decedents: A Sex-Stratified Analysis.

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7.  Suicidal ideation among young Afghanistan/Iraq War Veterans and civilians: Individual, social, and environmental risk factors and perception of unmet mental healthcare needs, United States, 2013.

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8.  Firing a weapon and killing in combat are associated with suicidal ideation in OEF/OIF veterans.

Authors:  Jessica C Tripp; Meghan E McDevitt-Murphy; Aisling V Henschel
Journal:  Psychol Trauma       Date:  2015-10-12

9.  The Army study to assess risk and resilience in servicemembers (Army STARRS).

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10.  Recent trends in the rural-urban suicide disparity among veterans using VA health care.

Authors:  Brian Shiner; Talya Peltzman; Sarah L Cornelius; Jiang Gui; Jenna Forehand; Bradley V Watts
Journal:  J Behav Med       Date:  2020-09-11
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