| Literature DB >> 34983460 |
Lauren McGillivray1, Demee Rheinberger2, Jessica Wang2, Alexander Burnett2, Michelle Torok2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Prevalence of suicidal ideation increases rapidly in adolescence, and many choose not to seek help and disclose their ideation. Young people who do disclose suicidal ideation, prefer to do so with peers and family compared to mental health professionals, who are best placed to provide evidence-based treatment. This study aimed to identify key factors associated with young people's decision to, or not to disclose suicidal thoughts to their mental health practitioner.Entities:
Keywords: Suicide prevention; disclosure; mental health professionals; youth suicide
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 34983460 PMCID: PMC8728900 DOI: 10.1186/s12888-021-03636-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Psychiatry ISSN: 1471-244X Impact factor: 3.630
Sample Characteristics and Disclosure of Suicidal Ideation to a Mental Health Professional
| Total sample | No disclosure | Disclosure | Significance test and effect size | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sex | ||||
| Female | 429 (83.8%) | 161 (84.3%) | 251 (83.9%) | χ2(1) .01, |
| Male | 83 (16.2%) | 30 (15.7%) | 48 (16.1%) | |
| Sexuality | ||||
| Heterosexual | 161 (31.4%) | 78 (40.8%) | 74 (24.7%) | χ2(1) 14.10, |
| Sexual minority | 352 (68.6%) | 113 (59.2%) | 225 (75.3%) | |
| Language at home | ||||
| English only | 460 (89.7%) | 173 (90.6%) | 267 (89.3%) | χ2(1) .21, |
| Multilingual | 53 (10.3%) | 18 (9.4%) | 32 (10.7%) | |
| Relationship status | ||||
| Single/not dating | 367 (71.5%) | 148 (77.5%) | 202 (67.6%) | χ2(1) 5.63, |
| Partner/dating | 146 (28.5) | 43 (22.5%) | 97 (32.4%) | |
| Location | ||||
| Metropolitan | 401 (78.5%) | 153 (80.1%) | 233 (78.5%) | χ2(1) .19, |
| Rural/remote | 110 (21.5%) | 38 (19.9) | 64 (21.5%) | |
| Prioritisation of suicidal ideation | ||||
| No | 209 (40.7%) | 112 (58.6%) | 78 (26.1%) | χ2(1) 52.02, |
| Yes | 304 (59.3%) | 79 (41.4%) | 221 (73.9%) | |
| Lifetime suicide attempt | ||||
| No | 273 (53.6%) | 137 (71.7%) | 123 (41.1%) | χ2(1) 43.79, |
| Yes | 236 (46.4%) | 54 (28.3%) | 176 (58.9%) | |
| Exposure to suicide loss | ||||
| No | 416 (81.9%) | 161 (84.7%) | 237 (79.3%) | χ2(1) 2.30, |
| Yes | 92 (18.1%) | 29 (15.3%) | 62 (20.7%) | |
| Disclosed to anyone | ||||
| No | 91 (18.1%) | 80 (41.9%) | 5 (1.7%) | χ2(1) 131.45, |
| Yes | 413 (81.9%) | 111 (58.1%) | 294 (98.3%) | |
| Age (years M, SD) | 17.6 (1.9) | 17.36 (1.83) | 17.71 (2.05) | t(488) = -1.91, |
| Depressiona (M, SD) | 27.45 (5.33) | 26.99, 5.02 | 27.94, 5.43 | t(488) = -1.94, |
| Anxietyb (M, SD) | 20.31 (4.97) | 20.48, 4.86 | 20.29, 5.04 | t(488) = .41, |
| Distressc (M, SD) | 19.04 (3.54) | 18.98, 3.45 | 19.17, 3.52 | t(488) = -.60, |
| Suicidal ideationd (M, SD) | 12.51 (8.75) | 10.41, 7.86 | 13.85, 8.97 | t(482) = -4.30, |
| Personal suicide stigmae (M, SD) | 51.20 (13.89) | 46.66, 14.46 | 53.12, 13.22 | t(382) = -4.23, |
| Therapeutic alliancef (M, SD) | 79.76 (17.84) | 74.20, 16.88 | 83.23, 17.58 | t(462) = -5.46, |
*p< .003 denotes significance after Bonferroni adjustment
aMeasured with the Patient Health Questionnaire Depression Scale (PHQ-9, [28]).
bMeasured with the Generalised Anxiety Disorder-7 Scale (GAD-7, [29]).
cMeasured with the Distress Questionnaire-5 (DQ5, [30]).
dMeasured with the Suicidal Ideation Attributes Scale (SIDAS, [26]).
eMeasured with the Personal Suicide Stigma Questionnaire (PSSQ, [32]).
fMeasured with the Revised Helping Alliance Questionnaire (HAq-II, [34]).
Binary Logistic Regression on Disclosure of Suicidal Ideation to a Mental Health Professional
| Predictors | B | Wald χ2 | OR | 95% CI |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age | .15 | 3.67 | 1.16 | 0.99 to 1.36 |
| Sexuality (heterosexual) | -.29 | .95 | .75 | 0.42 to 1.34 |
| Suicidal ideation | .02 | .87 | 1.02 | 0.98 to 1.06 |
| Prioritisation of SI (yes) | -1.42 | 25.38*** | .24 | 0.14 to 0.42 |
| Depression | -.03 | .94 | .97 | 0.90 to 1.03 |
| Personal suicide stigma | .04 | 8.50** | 1.04 | 1.01 to 1.06 |
| Therapeutic alliance | .04 | 23.78*** | 1.04 | 1.02 to 1.06 |
| Lifetime attempt (yes) | -1.15 | 14.73*** | .32 | 0.18 to 0.57 |
*p < .05; **p < .01; ***p < .001
Reasons why participants chose to disclose, chose not to disclose, and what would motivate disclosure of suicidal ideation to a mental health professional
| Response options | |
| I’m worried that suicidal thoughts will not go away, and I want help to manage them | 153 (29.8%) |
| Suicidal thoughts are interfering with my life as much as/more than other mental health problems | 152 (29.6%) |
| I believe that a mental health professional can help with my suicidal thoughts | 125 (24.4%) |
| Someone I know told me I should tell my mental health professional | 110 (21.4%) |
| Other reason/s (free text response)a | 69 (13.5%) |
| I’ve talked about suicidal thoughts with a mental health professional in the past and found this helpful | 52 (10.1%) |
| Suicidal thoughts have become a relatively new problem and I want to deal with them | 38 (7.4%) |
| I’m concerned that my mental health professional wouldn’t kept this information confidential | 133 (25.9%) |
| Suicidal thoughts are not interfering with my life as much as other mental health problems are | 81 (15.8%) |
| I think that suicidal thoughts will eventually go away, or are just a phase I’ll grow out of, so there’s no point talking about them | 80 (15.6%) |
| I’ve not talked about suicidal thoughts with a mental health professional in the past, but think that they will judge me or not respond well | 74 (14.4%) |
| Suicidal thoughts have become a normal part of my life | 74 (14.4%) |
| I don’t think a mental health professional can do anything about my suicidal thoughts | 65 (12.7%) |
| My mental health professional has never asked about suicidal thoughts so I’ve never brought it up | 61 (11.9%) |
| I’ve talked about suicidal thoughts with a mental health professional in the past, was upset by their response, and don’t want to share again | 25 (4.9%) |
| Other reason/s (free text response)b | 18 (3.5%) |
| If I knew this information would be kept confidential and not be shared with others | 340 (66.3%) |
| If my mental health professional asked about suicidal thoughts | 278 (54.2%) |
| If I thought that suicidal thoughts could be treated/ helped | 274 (53.4%) |
| If I thought my mental health professional would respond without judgement | 269 (52.4%) |
| If the suicidal thoughts became more frequent or severe | 267 (52.0%) |
| If the suicidal thoughts started to interfere more with my work/ school/ relationships | 241 (47.0%) |
| Other reason/s (free text response)c | 20 (3.9%) |
Each survey question allowed for endorsement of multiple response options.
aThe most common themes were ‘Wanting to get help for their suicidal thoughts’ (n=25, 36.2%) and ‘Fear of current or future outcomes of acting on their suicidal thoughts’ (n21, 30.4%). Additional themes and exemplar quotes are provided in Appendix C.
bThe most common themes were ‘Fear and consequences of disclosing’ (n=11, 61.1%) and ‘They were dismissive of their own thought’ (n=4, 22.2%). Additional themes and exemplar quotes are provided in Appendix B.
cThe most common themes were, ‘Assurance of no hospitalisation’ (n=7, 35.0%) and ‘If they had a good relationship with their mental health professional’ (n=6, 30.0%). Additional themes and exemplar quotes are provided in Appendix C.