| Literature DB >> 34239463 |
In-Chul Baek1, Soobin Jo1, Eun Ji Kim1,2, Ga Ryoung Lee3, Dong Hun Lee3, Hong Jin Jeon1,2,4.
Abstract
While there has been a slew of review studies on suicide measurement tools until now, there were not any reviews focusing on suicide assessment tools available in Korea. This review aimed to examine the psychometric properties of tools developed in Korea or the translated versions from the original tools in their foreign language and to identify potential improvements and supplements for these tools. A literature search was done using the Korean academic information search service, Research Information Service System, to identify the suicide measures to be included in this review. Abstracts were screened to identify which measures were used to assess suicide-related factors. Based on the established inclusion and exclusion criteria, 18 tools remained and we assessed their psychometric properties. The current review indicated several major findings. First, many of the tools did not report predictive validity and even those with predictive validity were based on past suicide attempts. Second, some of the tools overlooked the interactive component for the cause of suicide. In addition, information to supplement the self-reported and clinician-administered reports by collecting reports from the subjects' families and acquaintances is needed. It is also important to develop a screening tool that examines other aspects of an individual's personal life, including unemployment, bereavement, divorce, and childhood trauma. Moreover, tools that have been studied in more diverse groups of the population are needed to increase external validity. Finally, the linguistic translation of the tools into Korean needs to consider other cultural, social, and psychological factors of the sample of interest.Entities:
Keywords: assessment tools; reliability; screening; suicidal ideation; suicide; validity
Year: 2021 PMID: 34239463 PMCID: PMC8258346 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2021.679779
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychiatry ISSN: 1664-0640 Impact factor: 4.157
Figure 1Flow diagram of the systematic review to identify suicide measures.
Characteristics and psychometric properties of suicide measures.
| CSSRS ( | √ | 10 | 100 MDD patients | α range 0.62–0.88 | Not reported | Correlated with SSI ( | Two factors: passive suicide idea without intention, active suicide idea with intention | 58.6% Sensitivity and 79.6% specificity for suicide attempt | |
| CSSRS ( | √ | 10 | 31 inpatient, diagnosed with alcohol dependent disorder | α = 0.90 | Not reported | Correlated with SSI ( | Not reported | Not reported | |
| Beck Scale for Suicide Ideation ( | 21 | 1,241 undergraduate students | α = 0.74 | Correlated with SBQ-R ( | Two factors: active suicide idea, ambivalent attitude for suicide | Not reported | |||
| Beck Scale for Suicide Ideation ( | √ | 21 | 2,392 community sample | Not reported | Correlated with BDI-II ( | Two factors: motivation, preparation | Not reported | ||
| SPS ( | √ | 31 | 792 middle school, high school student | 0.70 Subscale range 0.65–0.80 | Half reliability 0.69–0.71 | Correlated with Rosenberg self-esteem scale ( | Four factors: hopelessness, suicidal ideation, negative self-evaluation, hostility | Not reported | |
| Screening for Depression and Thoughts of suicide ( | √ | 2 | 325 outpatients | Not reported | Not reported | Not reported | Not reported | 60.9% sensitivity and 83.3% specificity for lifetime suicide attempt | |
| BHS ( | √ | 20 | 1,022 community sample | A = 0.85 | 0.86 over a week | Correlated with PHQ-9 ( | Three factors: hopefulness, giving up, future expectations | Not reported | |
| NGASR ( | √ | 15 | 92 psychiatric inpatients | Not reported | Inter-rater Kappa = 0.89 | Correlated with Evaluation of Suicide Risk (Jonckheere-Terpstra Test J = 4.69) | Six factors: hopelessness, suicidal desire, psychosis, relationship breakdown, withdrawal, family history | Not reported | |
| SRSSIO ( | √ | 32 | 459 incarcerated offenders | α = 0.97 | Not reported | Correlated with Reynolds Suicidal ideation scale ( | Five factors: hopelessness about the future, cognitive and behavioral impulses, suicide incidents, depression and helplessness in daily life, self-harm thoughts | Cut-off 16 (sensitivity 0.91, specificity 0.81) | |
| Suicidal Imagery Questionnaire ( | √ | 10 | 365 adults | 0.94 | Over 2 weeks ( | Correlated with CSSRS – screening version ( | Two factors: spontaneous suicidal imagery, intrusive suicidal imagery | Not reported | |
| Self-report Depressive Symptom Inventory-Suicidality Subscale ( | √ | 4 | 554 undergraduate students | 0.93 | Not reported | Correlated with Beck SSI ( | One factor | Not reported | |
| Suicide Risk Scale for Medical Inpatients ( | √ | 7 | 100 psychiatric inpatients | 0.91 | Correlated with HADS ( | One factor | Cut-off 5, 71.4% sensitivity, 75.6% specificity | ||
| Korean Geriatric Suicidal Risk Scale ( | √ | √ | 24 | 312 (52 suicide attempter) | Kuder-Richardson-21 = 0.79 | 33 over 2 weeks ( | Correlated with NGASR ( | Not reported | Past suicide attempter Cut-off 11, 93.9% sensitivity, 75.7% specificity, 43.1% |
| Suicidal Dangerousness Scale for Military Soldiers ( | √ | 20 | 1,091 soldiers | α = 0.85 | Not reported | Correlated with depression ( | Four factors: Experience of suicide attempt, suicidal desire relief, suicidal plan concealment, motive for suicidal ideation | Not reported | |
| RFL ( | √ | 48 | 320 adults Community population (G. W. 34) | Subscales α range 0.68–0.95 | Not reported | Survival and Coping Subscales Correlated with SSI ( | Four factors: | Not reported | |
| KRFL-YA Reasons for Living for Young Adults ( | √ | 32 | 545 young adults | 0.95 | Not reported | Correlated with SSI ( | Five factors: Family relations, positive self-evaluation, coping beliefs, relationship with peers, future expectations | Not reported | |
| The College Student Reasons for Living Inventory ( | 46 | 289 undergraduates | |||||||
| College Student Reasons for Living Inventory | √ | 49 | 445 undergraduates | Subscale 0.76–0.96 | Not reported | Correlated with Family Hardiness Indexes ( | Five factors: Survival/coping beliefs and future expectations, responsibilities to family and peers, fear of social disapproval, fear of suicide, moral objections Discriminated | Not reported | |
| Korean version of the Reasons for Living Inventory for Adolescents, KRFL- A ( | √ | 32 | 751 high school students (male 291, female 460) | 0.98 | Over 1 month ( | SSI ( | Three factors: Peer acceptance, self-acceptance and optimism about the future, family alliance, fear of suicide | Not reported | |
| Measurement of Suicidal Protection (MSP) ( | √ | 26 | 330 high school students | 0.93 Subfactors 0.72–0.86 | Not reported | Correlated with the reasons for living inventory for adolescents (RFL-A) ( | Six factors: Fear of suicide, self-esteem, emotion regulation, support from others, support from family, and school life | Not reported | |
| Suicide Resilience Inventory-Korean Version (SRI-K) ( | √ | 25 | 278 undergraduate students | 0.94 Subfactors 0.88–0.93 | Not reported | Not reported | Three factors: Internal protective, external protective, emotional stability | Not reported | |
MDD, Major depressive disorder; SSI, Scale for Suicidal Ideation; BDI, Beck Depression Inventory; CSSRS, Columbia Suicide Severity Rating Scale.