| Literature DB >> 31091772 |
Nicolette Molina1, Martin Viola2, Madeline Rogers3, Daniel Ouyang4, James Gang5, Heather Derry6, Holly G Prigerson7.
Abstract
Background: Bereavement is associated with impaired mental health, increases in adverse health behaviors, and heightened risk of suicidal ideation, attempts, and death by suicide. The purpose of this literature review was to explore associations between cause of death and suicidal thoughts among bereaved individuals. Our aim was to compare incidence of suicidal ideation by cause of death and identify gaps in this literature to guide future research and clinical intervention.Entities:
Keywords: AIDS; HIV; accidental overdose; bereavement; cancer; cardiovascular disease; caregivers; dementia; grief; suicidal ideation
Year: 2019 PMID: 31091772 PMCID: PMC6562884 DOI: 10.3390/bs9050053
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Behav Sci (Basel) ISSN: 2076-328X
Search strategy by bereavement group.
| Cause of Death | Search Terms |
|---|---|
| Suicide | (suicide bereavement OR bereaved by suicide) AND (family OR carers OR caregivers) AND (suicide risk OR suicidal ideation OR suicide) |
| Accidental overdose | (accidental overdose bereavement OR bereaved by accidental overdose OR accidental overdose OR substance misuse death bereavement OR bereaved by substance misuse death OR substance misuse death OR overdose bereavement OR bereaved by overdose OR overdose) AND (family OR carers OR caregivers) AND (suicide risk OR suicidal ideation OR suicide) |
| Cancer | (cancer bereavement OR bereaved by cancer OR cancer) AND (family OR carers OR caregivers) AND (suicide risk OR suicidal ideation OR suicide) |
| Dementia | (dementia bereavement OR bereaved by dementia OR dementia) AND (family OR carers OR caregivers) AND (suicide risk OR suicidal ideation OR suicide) |
| HIV/AIDs | (HIV bereavement OR AIDS bereavement OR bereaved by AIDS OR bereaved by HIV) AND (family OR carers OR caregivers) AND (suicide risk OR suicidal ideation OR suicide) |
| Cardiovascular Disease | (cardiovascular disease bereavement OR bereaved by cardiovascular disease OR cardiovascular disease OR stroke bereavement OR bereaved by stroke OR stroke OR heart disease bereavement OR bereaved by heart disease OR heart disease) AND (family OR carers OR caregivers) AND (suicide risk OR suicidal ideation OR suicide) |
Figure 1Flow diagram of search process guided by the PRISMA statement [15].
Cause of death and percent of sample reporting suicidal ideation (SI) in bereavement.
| Cause of Death | % of Sample Endorsing SI | Time Since Death | Measured by | Population | Citation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 16% | 1 month | Beck Depression Inventory (BDI); item 9 | N = 60; First-degree relatives and spouses part of a crisis intervention study | Mitchell et al., 2005 [ |
| 22% | <8 weeks | BDI; item 9 | N = 122; First-degree relatives and spouses | de Groot et al., 2010 [ | |
| 43% | 44.4 months | BDI; item 9 | N= 28; Family members seeking mental health services | Williams et al., 2018 [ | |
| 14.1% a | 6 months | Beck Scale for Suicide Ideation (BSS) | N = 142; Adults, family, and friends of deceased | Kõlves et al., 2019 [ | |
| 26% | 2.5 months | Paykel suicide items (PSI) b | N = 153; First-degree relatives and spouses | de Groot et al., 2013 [ | |
| 9% | 8–10 years | Paykel suicide items (PSI) b | N = 68; First-degree relatives and spouses | de Groot et al., 2013 [ | |
| 26.7% | Not reported | Endorsement of “Have you ever seriously contemplated suicide in the past one year?” c | N = 30; family members | Song et al., 2005 [ | |
| 42% | Less than 3 years (n = 20; 21.5%) | Suicidal Ideation Questionnaire (SIQ) | N = 93; family members | Santos et al., 2015 [ | |
| 49% | 5.1 years | Endorsement of “Have you ever thought of taking your life, even though you would not actually do it?” d | N = 614; 48% of sample was blood-related to deceased | Pitman, et al., 2016 [ | |
| 27.3% | <12 months | Endorsement of “During the past 12 months did you ever seriously think about committing suicide?” | N = 68; family members | Cerel et al., 2005 [ | |
|
| No results found | ||||
|
| 16.5% | 6.5 months (median) | Yale Evaluation of Suicidality (YES) | N = 127; Adult informal caregivers from recruited from major metropolitan hospitals | Abbott et al., 2014 [ |
| 31.4% | 2–6 months | Endorsement of “Have you had suicidal thoughts at any time during the previous year?” | N = 501; Family members of deceased patients from registered from the Korean Terminal Cancer Patient Information System | Song et al., 2012 [ | |
|
| 13.7% | <2 years | Suicidal Behaviors Questionnaire—Revised (SBQ—R); item 2 e | N = 566; Adult informal caregivers from the mainly from Australia, Canada, and the US | O’Dwyer et al., 2015 [ |
|
| Not reported f | Rosengard et al., 1997 [ | |||
|
| No results found |
a % of individuals with high risk of suicidal ideation as indicated by cut-off point of 2 for BSS. b individuals with a score >8 were considered to have suicidal ideation. c participant responses were operationalized in two ways: “never/sometimes” or “seriously”. d participant responses of yes or no to “Have you ever thought of taking your life, even though you would not actually do it?”. e participant responses of “rarely” or “never” to the item “how often have you thought about killing yourself in the past year?” were classified as negative for suicidal ideation, and those who responded “sometimes” “often” and “very often” were classified as positive for suicidal ideation. f Rosengard and Folkman reported that 55% of their sample endorsed suicidal ideation at some point during the study, including periods pre- and post-bereavement. For that reason, this percentage is not reported in Table 2.