| Literature DB >> 28445517 |
Naoki Hayashi1, Miyabi Igarashi2, Atsushi Imai3, Yuka Yoshizawa4, Kaori Asamura3, Yoichi Ishikawa5, Taro Tokunaga3, Kayo Ishimoto3, Yoshitaka Tatebayashi6, Hirohiko Harima3, Naoki Kumagai2, Hidetoki Ishii7, Yuji Okazaki3,8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Suicidal behavior (SB) is a major, worldwide health concern. To date there is limited understanding of the associated motivational aspects which accompany this self-initiated conduct. AIMS: To develop a method for identifying motivational features associated with SB by studying admitted psychiatric patients, and to examine their clinical relevance.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28445517 PMCID: PMC5405953 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0176565
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Clinical characteristics of subjects.
| Male (N = 68) | Female (N = 87) | Total (N = 155) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 19 (27.9) / 26 (38.2) / 6 (8.8) / 17 (25.0) | 23 (26.4) / 30 (34.5) / 15 (17.2) / 19 (21.8) | 42 (27.1) / 56 (36.1) / 21 (13.5) / 36 (23.2) | |
| 36 (52.9) | 60 (69.0) | 96 (61.9) | |
| 28 (41.2) | 58 (66.7) | 86 (55.5) | |
| 24 (35.3) | 35 (40.2) | 59 (38.1) | |
| 28 (41.2) | 58 (66.7) | 86 (55.5) | |
| 21 (30.9) | 28 (32.2) | 49 (31.6) | |
| 33 (48.5) | 64 (73.6) | 97 (62.6) | |
| 18 (26.5) | 27 (31.0) | 45 (29.0) |
SB: Suicidal behavior, RLE: Recent life events, BPD: Borderline personality disorder, AVPD: Avoidant personality disorder
a Prescribed psychotropics; 37 (23.9%), other prescribed medicine; 3 (1.9%), OTC medicine; 6 (3.9%).
b Cutting of wrist or forearm; 38 (24.5%) and other part(s) of the body; 24 (15.5%).
c Hanging; 12 (7.7%) and other self-strangulation; 9 (5.8%).
d Jumping from a height; 18 (11.6%), attempting death in traffic 13; (8.4%) and others; 5 (3.2%).
e Major depressive disorders; 67 (43.2%), bipolar I and II disorders; 21 (13.5%).
f Panic disorders; 53 (34.2%), PTSD; 25 (16.1%).
g Alcohol-related disorders; 41 (26.5%) and non-alcoholic substance-related disorders; 28 (18.1%).
h Other frequent types of personality disorder (PD) were antisocial PD; 42 (27.1%) and obsessive-compulsive PD; 34 (21.9%).
i Male subjects were less common than females among subjects with mood disorders (p = 0.047, Exact test).
j Subjects with anxiety disorders were younger than subjects without these disorders The means (SDs) (years) were 33.8 (9.8) vs. 39.8 (13.5) (F1, 153 = 10.235, p = 0.002, ANOVA).
k Subjects with substance-related disorders were younger than subjects without these disorders (33.3 (8.5) vs. 38.5 (13.5), F1, 153 = 7.144, p = 0.008, ANOVA).
l Male subjects were less common than females among subjects with BPD (p = 0.002, Exact test). Subjects with BPD were younger than non-sufferers (32.7 (7.7) vs. 41.3 (14.5), F1, 153 = 22.537, p < 0.001, ANOVA).
m Subjects with AVPD were younger than non-sufferers (33.6 (8.6) vs. 37.8 (13.0), F1, 153 = 4.327, p = 0.039).
n Male subjects were less common than females among subjects with RLE discord or conflict (p = 0.002, Exact test). Subjects with RLE discord or conflict were younger than those without this RLE (34.8 (10.8) vs. 39.1 (13.4), F1, 153 = 4.574, p = 0.034, ANOVA).
Factor structure of the original Motivations for Suicidal Behaviors Scale (MSBS).
| IT | IC | SR | SS | Freq. (%) | ICC | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| .479 | .001 | .444 | 54 (34.8) | 0.811 | ||
| .442 | .027 | .360 | 34 (21.9) | 0.582 | ||
| .327 | .221 | .306 | 26 (17.4) | 0.571 | ||
| .301 | -.076 | .221 | 37 (23.9) | 0.616 | ||
| .286 | .191 | .202 | 18 (11.6) | 0.832 | ||
| .544 | .540 | .257 | .299 | 56 (36.1) | 0.640 | |
| .383 | .097 | .086 | 31 (20.0) | 0.801 | ||
| .410 | -.062 | .124 | 22 (14.2) | 0.769 | ||
| .447 | .180 | .215 | 35 (22.6) | 0.849 | ||
| .163 | .080 | .348 | 60 (38.7) | 0.799 | ||
| .036 | .092 | .309 | 57 (36.8) | 0.788 | ||
| .218 | .077 | .169 | 34 (21.9) | 0.650 | ||
| .477 | .077 | .200 | 18 (11.6) | 0.556 | ||
| .254 | .194 | .181 | 16 (10.3) | 0.686 | ||
| .310 | .020 | .420 | 30 (19.4) | 0.634 | ||
| .100 | .029 | .209 | 19 (12.2) | 0.687 | ||
| .454 | .194 | .190 | .181 | 24 (15.5) | 0.640 |
The factor structure derived from exploratory factor analysis based on maximal likelihood-extraction with Promax rotation is shown in this Table. Factor loadings greater than 0.5, are indicated in bold.
Freq. (%): Frequency (percentage) of the response “clearly present”.
ICC: Intraclass Correlation Coefficient, IT: Interpersonal-testing, IC: Interpersonal-change, SR: Self-renunciation, SS: Self-sustenance.
Items (Freq. (%), ICC) that were excluded from this study with insufficient reliability, were "To stop bad feelings (Item 01) (44 (28.4), 0.395)", "To relieve numb or empty feelings (Item 02) (48 (31.0), 0.295)", "To feel relaxed (Item 03) (21 (13.5), 0.176)", "To get relief from a terrible state of mind (Item 04), (50 (32.3), 0.048)", "You could not keep yourself in the terrible situation (Item 05) (107 (69.0), 0.469)", "The situation was so unbearable that you had to do something and didn't know what else to do (Item 06) (105 (67.7), 0.135)", "To escape for a while from an impossible situation (Item 07) (112 (72.3), 0.272)", "To recover the power of self-control (Item 12) (12 (0.08), 0.177)" and "To get other people to act differently or change (Item 21) (15 (0.10), 0.241)".
“To die (Item 13) (95 (61.3), 0.587)” was also excluded because this item was redundant in other SB-related scales.
Items 4, 6, 7, 17, 18, 19, 23, 24, 25 and 27 were common to the items of Bancroft et al. [4]. Items 1, 2, 3, 8, 9, 10, 16, 20 and 21 were common to the items of Nock and Prinstein [9]. (underlined items were used in the final model.)
Fig 1Confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) model of Motivations for Suicidal Behavior Scale (MSBS).
Standardized Maximum likelihood (ML)-based parameter estimates are shown in this Fig. Non-significant inter-factor covariates (paths) are indicated by a thin line. MSBS Items were “To punish yourself (Item 08)”, “To take responsibility for what you did (Item 09)”, “To feel something, even if it was pain (Item 10)”, “To have a feeling of living, and to assure yourself that you are living (Item 11)”, “To retrieve a sense of being yourself (Item 14)”, “To make the others understand you (Item 15)”, “To seek help from someone (Item 17)”, “To get attention (Item 16)”, “To show how much you loved someone (Item 18)”, “To make people understand how desperate you were feeling (Item 19)”, “To get control of a situation (Item 20)”, “To make others compensate for what they did to you (Item 22)”, “To make people sorry for the way they have treated you, or to frighten or get your own back on someone (Item 23)”, “To influence a particular person or get them to change their mind (Item 24)”, “To make things easier for others (Item 25)”, “To see what others will do in response to the (suicidal) behavior (Item 26)” and “To find out whether someone really loved you or not (Item 27)”.
Correlation analyses of MSBS subscale scores and SB-related clinical characteristics.
| IC | SR | SS | BDI | BHS | SIS | OAS-M1 | OAS-M2 | OAS-M 3 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0.114 | -0.147 | -0.137 | |||||||
| 1.000 | 0.112 | 0.113 | 0.007 | -0.060 | -0.157 | ||||
| 1.000 | 0.103 | -0.015 | 0.024 | 0.119 | |||||
| 1.000 | 0.102 | -0.135 | 0.049 | 0.032 | 0.035 | 0.020 | |||
| 1.000 | -0.081 | -0.038 | |||||||
| 1.000 | -0.093 | 0.122 | |||||||
| 1.000 | |||||||||
| 1.000 | -0.090 | ||||||||
| 1.000 | -0.080 | ||||||||
| 1.000 |
BDI: Beck Depression Inventory-II, BHS: Beck Hopelessness Scale, SIS: Suicide Intent Scales, OAS-M: Overt Aggression Scale-Modified. OAS-M 1: Aggressive behavior, OAS-M 2: Irritability, OAS-M 3: Suicidal tendencies
* p < 0.05,
** p <0.01 (two-tailed)
Multivariate Analysis of Covariance (MANCOVA) regression of MSBS in relation to psychiatric and personality disorders (groups).
| Motivations | Psychiatric disorders | B | p | 95% CI | Partial Eta Squared |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Affective disorders | -0.530 | 0.324 | -1.588 - 0.528 | 0.007 | |
| Anxiety disorders | 1.036 | 0.069 | -0.081 - 2.153 | 0.022 | |
| BPD | 1.144 | 0.059 | -0.046 - 2.333 | 0.024 | |
| Affective disorders | -0.589 | 0.103 | -1.299 - 0.121 | 0.018 | |
| Anxiety disorders | 0.679 | 0.076 | -0.071 - 1.428 | 0.021 | |
| BPD | 0.922 | 0.024 | 0.124 - 1.721 | 0.034 | |
| Affective disorders | 0.186 | 0.630 | -0.575 - 0.947 | 0.002 | |
| Anxiety disorders | 0.768 | 0.061 | -0.036 - 1.571 | 0.023 | |
| BPD | 0.621 | 0.153 | -0.234 - 1.477 | 0.014 | |
| Affective disorders | -0.439 | 0.234 | 1.165 - -0.287 | 0.010 | |
| Anxiety disorders | 0.548 | 0.160 | -0.218 - 1.314 | 0.013 | |
| BPD | 0.872 | 0.036 | 0.056 - 1.688 | 0.029 |
Regression coefficients of covariates (gender and age) were not statistically significant.
MSBS: Motivations for Suicidal Behaviors Scale, 95% CI: 95% Confidence Interval, BPD: Borderline Personality Disorder
Multivariate Analysis of Covariance (MANCOVA) regression of MSBS in relation to interpersonal recent life events.
| Motivations | Interpersonal RLE | B | p | 95% CI | Partial Eta Squared |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Discord or conflict | 1.239 | 0.024 | 0.169–2.310 | 0.034 | |
| Separation or death | -0.696 | 0.210 | -1.787–0.395 | 0.010 | |
| Discord or conflict | 0.721 | 0.052 | -0.007–1.449 | 0.025 | |
| Separation or death | -0.365 | 0.333 | -1.107–0.377 | 0.006 | |
| Discord or conflict | -0.304 | 0.437 | -1.075–0.467 | 0.004 | |
| Separation or death | 0.920 | 0.022 | 0.134–1.706 | 0.034 | |
| Discord or conflict | -0.165 | 0.660 | -0.904–0.575 | 0.001 | |
| Separation or death | 0.674 | 0.079 | -0.079–1.428 | 0.020 |
Regression coefficients of covariates (gender and age) showed no statistical significance.
MSBS: Motivations for Suicidal Behaviors Scale, 95% CI: 95% Confidence Interval, RLE: Recent Life Event
Multivariate Analysis of Covariance (MANCOVA) regression of MSBS scores in relation to SB methods.
| Motivations | SB methods | B | P | 95% CI | Partial Eta Squared |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Overdosing | 1.471 | 0.080 | -0.180–3.121 | 0.020 | |
| Self-cutting | 1.838 | 0.022 | 0.263–3.412 | 0.034 | |
| Others | 1.647 | 0.057 | -0.052–3.344 | 0.024 | |
| Overdosing | 0.544 | 0.341 | -0.580–1.668 | 0.006 | |
| Self-cutting | 0.895 | 0.101 | -0.178–1.967 | 0.018 | |
| Others | 0.336 | 0.567 | -0.820–1.492 | 0.002 | |
| Overdosing | -0.538 | 0.378 | -1.741–0.664 | 0.005 | |
| Self-cutting | -0.476 | 0.414 | -1.622–0.671 | 0.004 | |
| Others | -0.089 | 0.887 | -1.325–1.147 | 0.000 | |
| Overdosing | 1.479 | 0.010 | 0.354–2.604 | 0.043 | |
| Self-cutting | 1.038 | 0.058 | -0.035–2.111 | 0.024 | |
| Other methods | 1.075 | 0.068 | -0.081–2.232 | 0.022 |
Regression coefficients of covariates (gender and age) were not statistically significant.
MSBS: Motivations for Suicidal Behaviors Scale, 95% CI: 95% Confidence Interval, SB: Suicidal behavior
a The reference category is self-strangulation in this analysis.
b Predominant methods were ‘jumping from a height’ and ‘attempting death in traffic’.
The factor analytic studies of the motivations for SBs of clinical populations
| Authors, Scale name, Number of items and factors, Studied population (If presented, frequent SB methods) | Interpersonal factors (labels) | Intrapersonal factors (labels) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Minimal change | Greater change | Minimal change | Greater change | |
| Holden & Kerr (1998), “Reasons for Attempting Suicide”, 14 items, 2 factors, 173 patients presenting with suicide attempts or ideations | Extrapunitive / manipulative reasons (6 items) | None | Internal perturbations (8 items) | |
| Osuch et al. (1999), SIMS, 36 items, 5 factors, 99 psychiatric patients admitted with SIB (Self-cutting, hitting, burning and substance abuse) | Influencing others (5 items) | Affect modulation (9 items) | Punitive duality (6 items) | |
| Hjelmeland et al. (2002), MPQ, 14 items, 4 factors, 1646 patients presenting with parasuicide (Mostly, overdosing) | Care seeking (4 items) | Influencing others (3 items) | Temporary escape (3 items) | Final exit (4 items) |
| McAuliffe et al. (2007), MPQ, 14 items, 4 factors, 146 patients presenting with DSH (Mostly, overdosing) | Appeal (4 items) | Revenge (2 items) | Interruption (4 items) | Escape (4 items) |
| Nixon et al. (2015), OSI, 22 items, 4 factors, 94 adolescent inpatients with NSSI | Social influence (7 items) | External emotion regulation (3 items | Internal emotion regulation (7 items) | |
| Klonsky et al. (2015), ISAS, 39 items (13 functions), 2 factors, 946 mostly adolescent patients with NSSI (Mostly, self-cutting and scratching) | Interpersonal factor (3 purely interpersonal functions) | (5 functions) | Intrapersonal factor (5 functions) | |
| This study, MSBS, 15 items, 4 factors, 155 psychiatric patients admitted with SB (Overdosing, self-cutting and self-strangulation) | Interpersonal-testing (IT) (5 items) | Interpersonal-change (IC) (3 items) | Self-sustenance (SR) (3 items) | Self-renunciation (SS) (4 items) |
MPQ: Motives for Parasuicide Questionnaire, SIMS: Self-Injury Motivation Scale, OSI: Ottawa Self-Injury Inventory, ISAS: Inventory of Statements About Self-injury, MSBS: Motivations for Suicidal Behavior Scale.
SB: Suicidal Behavior, SIB: Self-Injurious Behavior, DSH: Deliberate Self-Harm, NSSI: Non-Suicidal Self-Injury.
The classification applied in this table is from the 4-factor model described in this study. Two distinctions: interpersonal vs. intra-personal directedness, and the level of assumed change (influence) by suicidal behavior (minimal vs. greater) or the relation to emotion (emotion-counteracting vs. emotion-driven) were used.
The study of Nock & Prinstein [9] is not included in this table since it did not undertake any novel explorative analysis, but instead statistically confirmed the authors’ theoretical model.
a 3 items in this factor that pertain to the intrapersonal motivations are included here.
b The item “To punish yourself” in these factors that pertains to the intra-personal and greater change-assumed (emotion-driven) motivations is included here.
c 2 items of generating especially positive feelings: “sense of exhilaration” and experiencing a “high” are included in these factors.
d The item “To remind yourself that you are alive” in this factor that pertains to the intra-personal and minimal change-assumed (emotion-counteracting) motivations is included here.
e The item “I do not know why I did it” in this factor cannot be properly classified in this table.
f The item “To let others know how desperate you are” in this factor that pertains to the interpersonal and greater change-assumed (emotion-driven) motivations is included here.
g This factor includes 3 items of releasing strong emotions. Since it is assumed that they exert a strong influence on others, the factor is placed in this category of interpersonal and greater change-assumed (emotion-driven) motivations.
h These functions are Autonomy, Marking distress, Self-care, Sensation-seeking and Toughness.