| Literature DB >> 29470514 |
Meha Bhatt1, Stefan Perera1, Laura Zielinski2, Rebecca B Eisen2, Sharon Yeung3, Wala El-Sheikh4, Jane DeJesus4, Sumathy Rangarajan4, Heather Sholer5, Elizabeth Iordan5, Pam Mackie4, Shofiqul Islam4, Mahshid Dehghan4, Lehana Thabane1,5,6,7, Zainab Samaan1,5,8,9,10.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Suicidal behaviour remains challenging for clinicians to predict, with few established risk factors and warning signs among psychiatric patients. AIM: We aimed to describe characteristics and identify risk factors for suicide attempts among patients with psychiatric disorders.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29470514 PMCID: PMC5823369 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0192998
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Eligibility and recruitment flowchart.
Study sample characteristics.
| Cases | Psychiatric Controls | Univariate Test of Association | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age (years): mean (SD) | 45.18 (14.69) | 45.01 (14.23) | t = -0.09 |
| df = 248 | |||
| p = 0.928 | |||
| Sex: n (% female) | 146 (55.48) | 104 (50.00) | χ2 = 0.73 |
| df = 1 | |||
| p = 0.392 | |||
| Elementary | 8 (5.56) | 8 (8.0) | χ2 = 3.57 |
| High-School | 78 (54.17) | 42 (42.00) | df = 2 |
| Post-Secondary | 58 (40.28) | 50 (50.00) | p = 0.167 |
| Employed | 34 (23.45) | 33 (32.67) | χ2 = 2.56 |
| df = 1 | |||
| p = 0.110 | |||
| Unemployed | 29 (26.61) | 21 (32.31) | χ2 = 4.17 |
| Retired | 17 (15.60) | 7 (10.77) | df = 3 |
| On Disability | 56 (51.38) | 28 (43.08) | p = 0.244 |
| On Social Security | 7 (6.42) | 9 (13.85) | |
| Currently Married/Common Law/Live with Partner | 39 (26.90) | 31 (30.10) | χ2 = 5.38 |
| Never Married | 45 (31.03) | 43 (41.75) | df = 2 |
| Widowed/Separated/Divorced | 61 (42.07) | 29 (28.16) | p = 0.068 |
| Lives Alone | 64 (46.38) | 47 (46.08) | χ2 = 0.0021 |
| Doesn’t Live Alone | 74 (53.62) | 55 (53.92) | df = 1 |
| p = 0.963 | |||
| Current Smoker | 59 (43.38) | 35 (35.35) | χ2 = 1.72 |
| Former Smoker | 34 (25.00) | 26 (26.26) | df = 2 |
| Never Smoked | 43 (31.62) | 38 (38.38) | p = 0.423 |
| Borderline Symptom List Score: mean (SD) | 1.82 (1.03) | 1.32 (0.97) | t = -3.68 |
| df = 203 | |||
| p = 0.0003 | |||
| Barratt Impulsivity Scale Score: mean (SD) | 71.40 (12.03) | 65.20 (10.23) | t = -4.14 |
| df = 213 | |||
| p = 0.0001 | |||
SD: standard deviation
Primary diagnosis of psychiatric disorders (DSM-IV Axis I diagnosis).
| Cases | Controls | Univariate Test of Association | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mood Disorders | 97 (74.6) | 74 (77.1) | χ2 = 0.18 |
| df = 1 | |||
| p = 0.67 | |||
| Substance Use Disorders | 19 (14.5) | 11 (11.5) | χ2 = 0.48 |
| df = 1 | |||
| p = 0.49 | |||
| Psychotic Disorders | 11 (8.5) | 6 (6.3) | χ2 = 0.39 |
| df = 1 | |||
| p = 0.53 | |||
| Anxiety Disorders | 3 (2.3) | 5 (5.2) | p = 0.29 |
*Fisher’s exact test was used to compare proportions due to low expected frequencies (<5).
Notes: Psychiatric diagnosis data was missing for 24 participants.
Method of suicide attempt.
| n | |
|---|---|
| Pills | 99 |
| Cutting | 25 |
| Hanging | 7 |
| Suffocating | 3 |
| Firearm/Explosive | 2 |
| Other | 15 |
*Other methods include poisoning, drowning, setting self on fire, jumping from height, driving or jumping into traffic, alcohol consumption, starvation and intravenous drug use.
Notes: The total n is not in accordance with the sample size because 14 participants reported using multiple methods during the suicide attempt. 11 participants were missing data for method of suicide attempt.
Suicide intent scale questionnaire in case group.
| Yes | 38 (31.67) |
| No | 82 (68.33) |
| Somebody Present | 25 (19.08) |
| Somebody Nearby or In Contact | 34 (25.95) |
| No-One Nearby or In Contact | 72 (54.96) |
| Timed so that intervention is probable | 38 (32.20) |
| Timed so that intervention is unlikely | 38 (32.20) |
| Timed so that intervention is highly unlikely | 42 (35.59) |
| No precautions | 67 (52.34) |
| Passive precautions | 26 (20.31) |
| Active precautions | 35 (27.34) |
| Notified helper regarding attempt | 41 (31.30) |
| Contacted but did not specifically notify helper regarding the attempt | 11 (8.40) |
| Did not contact or notify potential helper | 79 (60.31) |
| None | 104 (80.00) |
| Partial preparation or ideation | 13 (10.00) |
| Definite plans made (e.g. changes in will, taking out insurance) | 13 (10.00) |
| No Note | 95 (73.08) |
| Presence of Note | 35 (26.92) |
| Thought that what he/she had done would not kill him or her | 24 (18.32) |
| Unsure whether what she/he had done would kill him/her | 25 (19.08) |
| Believed that what she/he had done would kill him/her | 82 (62.60) |
| Did not want to die | 2 (1.54) |
| Unsure | 21 (16.15) |
| Wanted to die | 107 (82.31) |
| Impulsive, no premeditation | 47 (36.15) |
| Considered act for approx. 1 hour | 7 (5.38) |
| Considered act for approx. 1 day | 8 (6.15) |
| Considered act for more than 1 day | 68 (52.31) |
| Patient glad she/he had recovered | 62 (47.69) |
| Patient uncertain whether she/he is glad or sorry | 44 (33.85) |
| Patient sorry he she had recovered | 24 (18.46) |
| Survival certain | 14 (11.11) |
| Death unlikely | 33 (26.19) |
| Death likely or certain | 79 (62.70) |
| No | 25 (19.23) |
| Yes | 69 (53.07) |
| Uncertain | 36 (27.69) |
Notes: ‘N’ represents the total number of participants who responded to the question and ‘n’ represents the proportion of participants with the specified response.
Risk factors for attempted suicide: Multivariable logistic regression results (n = 211).
| Factors | Odds Ratio | 95% Confidence Interval | P-value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Psychiatric Diagnosis | |||
| Substance Use Disorder | Ref | Ref | Ref |
| Psychotic Disorder | 1.28 | 0.33–4.96 | 0.72 |
| Mood Disorder | 0.91 | 0.37–2.25 | 0.85 |
| Anxiety Disorder | 0.37 | 0.06–2.16 | 0.27 |
| Borderline Symptom Score | 1.07 | 1.01–1.13 | 0.02 |
| Barratt Impulsiveness Score | 1.15 | 1.03–1.30 | 0.02 |
| Age (years) | 1.00 | 0.98–1.02 | 0.76 |
| Sex: Female | 1.47 | 0.81–2.66 | 0.21 |
| Smoking Status: Current Smoker | 1.29 | 0.69–2.41 | 0.42 |
*p-value<0.05
Notes: Age is interpreted as increase in one year. Borderline Symptom and Barratt Impulsiveness scores are interpreted as increases in four points on the questionnaires.