| Literature DB >> 33853629 |
Zachary A Cupler1,2, Clinton J Daniels3, Derek R Anderson3, Michael T Anderson4, Jason G Napuli5, Megan E Tritt4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Suicide is a major public health concern that has wide-reaching implications on individuals, families, and society. Efforts to respond to a public health concern as a portal-of-entry provider can reduce morbidity and mortality of patients. The objective of this commentary is a call to action to initiate dialogue regarding suicide prevention and the role the chiropractic profession may play. DISCUSSION: This public health burden requires doctors of chiropractic to realize current strengths and recognize contemporaneous deficiencies in clinical, research, and policy environments. With this better understanding, only then can the chiropractic profession strive to enhance knowledge and promote clinical acumen to target and mitigate suicide risk to better serve the public.Entities:
Keywords: Biopsychosocial; Chiropractic; Public health; Suicide prevention
Year: 2021 PMID: 33853629 PMCID: PMC8048297 DOI: 10.1186/s12998-021-00372-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chiropr Man Therap ISSN: 2045-709X
Prevention health measures and corresponding to stages of disease. Adapted from Kisling and Das [13].
| Natural history stage | Prevention health measure | Definition | Suicide prevention specific example |
|---|---|---|---|
| Underlying | Primordial prevention | Risk factor reduction targeted towards an entire population through focus on social and environmental conditions | Government policy (i.e. lethal means) |
| Susceptible | Primary prevention | Measures aimed at a susceptible population or individual prior to the occurrence of disease; healthy individuals | Health promotion Suicide prevention education to college students at risk for suicide attempts. Assessing infrastructure for jumping points in military and veteran health care facilities |
| Subclinical | Secondary prevention | Early disease detection and its target is healthy-appearing individuals with subclinical forms of the disease; screenings; seeks to prevent the onset of disease | PCP performs routine screening for suicide risk factors Treatment for depression or associated risk factor for self-directed violence Crisis counseling for a community after a suicide |
| Clinical | Tertiary prevention | Implemented in symptomatic patients and aims to reduce the severity of the disease as well as any associated sequelae; rehabilitation efforts | Crisis counseling Inpatient rehabilitation after a suicidal act |
| Recovery/disability/death | Quaternary prevention | An action taken to protect individuals from medical interventions (over-medicalization) that are likely to cause more harm than good | Ongoing services for the after-effects and consequences of suicide Resources such as suicide survivor support groups |
Fig. 1Relationship of psychosocial constructs and processes on pain-related outcomes [29]
Fig. 2Fear avoidance model of Pain (From: Vlaeyen and Linton.) (Edwards et al. for permissions) [29]
Fig. 3Interrelationships among pain intensity, pain catastrophizing, pain self-efficacy, and depressive symptoms [31]
Fig. 4Chronic pain and Post-traumatic Stress Disorder: mutual maintenance [55]
Ethics terminology adapted from Sita et al. [41]
| Term | Definition |
|---|---|
| Autonomy | The ability to make one’s own decisions |
| Beneficence | Doing good on behalf of the patient |
| Nonmaleficence | Not causing harm to the patient |