Literature DB >> 2767443

Coping with the suicidal elderly: a physician's guide.

R Richardson1, S Lowenstein, M Weissberg.   

Abstract

Advancing age is associated with a markedly increased risk of suicide. In the United States, one fourth of all suicides are carried out by citizens age 60 or older. The majority of American elders who commit suicide use a firearm to do so. Most suicidal elders look to their primary care physician for help, although they may not directly express their plan. Therefore, physicians must be alert to clues. By far the principal risk factor for suicide is major depression. The risk is heightened by recent losses, alcohol or drug abuse, psychosis, cognitive decline, and chronic disease. Hopelessness, anhedonia, self-reproach, guilt, and a formed lethal plan are signs of a life-threatening suicidal crisis which requires urgent intervention. Physicians must act decisively in recognition of the fact that suicidality is a transient, treatable condition.

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Year:  1989        PMID: 2767443

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Geriatrics        ISSN: 0016-867X


  2 in total

1.  Suicide among the elderly: issues facing public health.

Authors:  S B Sorenson
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  1991-09       Impact factor: 9.308

Review 2.  Suicide risk factors among veterans: risk management in the changing culture of the Department of Veterans Affairs.

Authors:  M T Lambert; D R Fowler
Journal:  J Ment Health Adm       Date:  1997
  2 in total

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