| Literature DB >> 36110450 |
Narges Joshaghani1, Nicole Villa2, Omar Badla3, Raman Goit2, Samia E Saddik4, Sarah N Dawood5, Ahmad M Rabih2, Ahmad Mohammed2, Aishwarya Raman6, Manish Uprety2, Maria Jose Calero7, Maria Resah B Villanueva8, Safeera Khan2.
Abstract
This study aims to review the current literature regarding the association between suicide risk in patients aged 65 years or over with dementia residing in long-term care facilities (LTCs). We also evaluate the most common methods of suicide and protective versus risk factors of nursing home (NH) life on suicide behavior in patients with dementia. Following preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines, we performed a systematic review of the relevant free full-text articles found in PubMed, Pub Psych, Cochrane library, and Science Direct up until April 4, 2022. Medical Subject Heading (MeSH) terms and keywords (nursing home, long-term care facility, suicide, self-injurious behavior, dementia), were used to search for full-text randomized clinical trials (RCTs), cross-sectional, case-control, cohort studies, systematic reviews, and studies published in the English language in the last 12 years, focused on human subjects 65 years and older were selected based on predefined eligibility criteria. The search yielded 57,909 articles, of which 12 studies met our inclusion criteria. The articles were subjected to quality appraisal by two reviewers. We used the Newcastle Ottawa scale (NOS) for quality assessment with a mean score of six for 12 observational studies used in this paper. Of the included reports, six were cross-sectional, five were cohort, and one was case-control. Four articles carefully examine the relationship between dementia and suicide, and all confirm the hypothesis that staying in LTCs reduces the risk of suicide in patients with dementia. However, the rest of the articles generally determine a higher risk of suicide in demented patients and describe male gender, non-Hispanic white race, younger age, newly diagnosed with dementia within one-year, mild dementia, comorbidities, depression, previous history of suicidal behavior, low social support and unstable family relationship as the risk factors of suicide in this population. In comparison, extended stay in NHs and other kinds of LTCs, severe dementia with impaired insight, older age, comorbid schizophrenia, physical disability with limitation and more difficulty preparing and executing a suicide plan, positive and robust social relationships, access to professional caregivers and high frequency of visits from relatives marked as the protective factors. Existing research on suicide risk in long-term care facility residents with dementia is limited. However, due to the increase in dementia rates that require people to reside in NHs and on the other hand, considering the multiple risk factors of suicide in the elderly living in such places, the need for a screening system for identifying people at suicide risk and performing preventive therapeutic and behavioral interventions is well felt.Entities:
Keywords: dementia; long-term care facility; nursing home; self-injurious behavior; suicide
Year: 2022 PMID: 36110450 PMCID: PMC9462450 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.27858
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
| Inclusion criteria | Exclusion criteria |
| Ages ≥ 65-year old | Ages < 65-year old |
| Papers from April 2010 onward | Papers published before April 2010 |
| Papers published in the English language | Papers not published in English |
| Papers focusing on human subjects | Studies that used animals |
| Randomized clinical trials (RCTs), case-control, cross-sectional, cohort studies, systematic reviews | Unpublished literature, books, and documents, grey literature |
Keywords, MeSH terms used, and results
Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
| Keywords | Database | Initial Results | After screening | Eligible |
| Dementia [MeSH] AND Suicide [MeSH] OR Self-injurious behavior [MeSH] AND Nursing home [MeSH] OR Long-term care facility [MeSH] | PubMed | 23,780 | 447 | 7 |
| TITLE-ABS-KEY (Dementia) AND TITLE-ABS-KEY (Suicide or self-injurious behavior) AND TITLE-ABS-KEY (Nursing home or Long-term care facility) | Science Direct | 13,965 | 125 | 2 |
| “Dementia” AND “Suicide” OR “Self-injurious behavior” AND “Nursing home” OR “long-term care facility” | PubPsych | 1865 | 52 | 1 |
| TITLE-ABS-KEY (Dementia) AND TITLE-ABS-KEY (Suicide) OR (self-injurious behavior) AND TITLE-ABS-KEY (Nursing home) OR (Long-term care facility) | Cochrane library | 18,299 | 64 | 2 |
Summary of critical appraisal of included studies using the Newcastle-Ottawa quality assessment scale for observational studies
* Selection: a) exposed truly representative of average, b) selection of non-exposed from the same community, c) exposure ascertained by secure record or interview d) demonstration of the outcome of interest not present at the start of the study; * Comparability: Comparability of cases and controls on the basis of the design or analysis controlled for confounder; * Outcome: a) follow up long enough for an outcome to occur b) complete follow up of all subjects c) subject lost to follow up unlikely to introduce bias; * Quality assessment: New castle Ottawa scale are converted to the AHRQ (Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality) standards.
---Thresholds for converting the Newcastle-Ottawa scales to AHRQ standards (good, fair, and poor): ***Good quality: 3 or 4 stars in selection domain AND 1 or 2 stars in comparability domain AND 2 or 3 stars in outcome/exposure domain ***Fair quality: 2 stars in selection domain AND 1 or 2 stars in comparability domain AND 2 or 3 stars in outcome/exposure domain ***Poor quality: 0 or 1 star in selection domain OR 0 stars in comparability domain OR 0 or 1 stars in outcome/exposure domain
| Study ID [Ref] | Selection (Maximum 4) | Comparability (Maximum2) | Outcome (Maximum 3) | Quality assessment |
| Moon et al., 2021 [ | *** | * | *** | Good |
| Seyfried et al., 2011 [ | *** | *** | Good | |
| McCarthy et al,.2013 [ | *** | *** | Good | |
| Temkin-Greener et al., 2020 [ | *** | * | *** | Good |
| Günak et al., 2021 [ | *** | * | ** | Good |
| Choi et al., 2021 [ | ** | ** | ** | Good |
| Nie et al., 2020 [ | *** | * | *** | Good |
| Wongpakaran et al., 2012 [ | *** | * | ** | Good |
| Gujral et al., 2021 [ | *** | ** | ** | Good |
| Holmstrand et al., 2021 [ | *** | ** | Fair | |
| Annor et al., 2019 [ | *** | ** | Fair | |
| Chappell et al., 2016 [ | *** | ** | Fair |
Figure 1PRISMA 2020 flowchart for the search and selection process
From: Page et al. The PRISMA 2020 statement: an updated guideline for reporting systematic reviews [15].
Characteristics of included studies in systematic review
| Study Author, Year [Ref] | Study design | Sample size and composition | Sample characteristic | Time collected | Location | Main findings |
| Sungje Moon,2021 [ | Cohort, retrospective | N= 62,282 from the “Older Adults Cohort DB” of the National Health Insurance Service | Older adults aged> 60 with dementia | 2002-2015 | South Korea | The suicide risk of older adults using LTCS (including facilities and in-home services) was about 0.256-times lower than those who did not use it. whereas it increased after the expansion of the dementia grading |
| Lisa S. Seyfried,2011 [ | Cohort, retrospective | N=294,952 VA patients | patients ≥ 60 years old with the diagnosis of dementia, Male (97%) | 2001-2005 | USA | Suicide rate in study population: Inpatient NH stay: 2.5% versus outpatient psych visit 55.2% and outpatient non- psych visit 96.5% A history of inpatient psychiatric care was significantly associated with increased risk of suicide, while an inpatient nursing home stay which was associated with a lower risk of suicide |
| John F. McCarthy,2013 [ | Cross-sectional | N=237,426 Persons Discharged Alive From 137 VA Nursing Homes | All ages, Male (96.9%) | 2002-2008 | USA | Suicide mortality in VA nursing home population ≥ 60 years old= 107.2/100,000 and after 6 months of discharge in same group = 267.6/100,00 which increased by age. Hazard ratio for suicide among patients discharged from VA nursing homes with dementia is 0.66, with depression is 1.12 and with serious mental illnesses is 1.02 |
| Helena Temkin-Greener,2020 [ | Cross- sectional | 1,864,102 post-acute and 304,106 long-stay admissions to just over 15,000 NHs | Residents of NHs | 7.2014- 6.2015 | USA | predicted probability of SI in residents with dementia: post-acute admission=0.93 >post-acute discharge=0.92 > long stay admission=0.88 Residents with SI had a lower prevalence of moderate/severe cognitive impairment, but higher prevalence of depressive symptoms and moderate/severe aggressive behavior compared to residents without SI |
| Mia Maria Günak, 2021 [ | Cohort study | N=147, 595 from all VA medical centers | Aged≥ 50 years old, 97.1 % were male and 86.1 % were non-Hispanic white | October 1, 2011-September 30, 2013, and follow-up through December 31, 2016 | USA | The risk of suicide attempt was approximately 1.2 to 1.3 times higher in patients with MCI or dementia diagnoses compared to control group (patients without MCI or dementia) |
| Jae Woo Choi, 2021 [ | Cohort, retrospective | N= 36541 from National Health Insurance Service–Senior Cohort data | older adults Aged ≥ 60 with newly diagnosed dementia (MMSE score ≤ 26 | 2004-2012 | South Korea | Patients with dementia but without other mental disorders and patients with dementia and other mental disorders had an increased risk of suicide death compared to patients without dementia. Patients with dementia and schizophrenia, mood disorders or anxiety or somatoform disorders respectively, had an increased risk of suicide death compared to patients with those conditions but without dementia |
Characteristics of included studies in systematic review continued
| Study Author, Year | Study design | Sample size and composition | Sample characteristic | Time collected | Location | Main findings |
| Yu Nie, 2020 [ | Cross -sectional | N=817, living in nursing homes> 1 year | Older adults aged> 60 who don’t have severe physical or mental illness | Oct-Dec 2018 | china | risk factors for suicidal ideation among elderly adults living in nursing homes were living in a rural area, infrequent visits from relatives, history of chronic disease, depression symptoms, reduced social support and ADL disability. |
| Nahathai Wongpakaran, 2012 [ | Cross -sectional | N=81 from LTC facility residents | Aged 63-94 | Feb-March 2011 | Northern Thailand | 40.7% were found to have cognitive impairment, and 23.5% met the criteria for current major depressive episodes. Though the majority was in the low-risk group, 32.1% were reported as being at risk of suicide. |
| Swathi Gujral,2021 [ | Case -control | N=278 from community population | Aged ≥ 50 years old | 2006-2018 | USA | Both early-onset and late-onset suicide attempters performed worse on executive measures but late-onset attempters exhibited a broader range of low cognitive scores (global cognition, processing speed, memory) relative to non-suicidal depressed and non-psychiatric comparison groups |
| Cecilia Holmstrand,2021 [ | Cohort study | N=1223 from community population | Older adults aged ≥ 65 years old, a primary diagnosis of dementia and a SMMSE score ≤24 | 2010-2013 | 8 European countries: Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, the Netherlands, Spain, Sweden and the United Kingdom | In the multivariate regression analysis, country of origin, moderate stage of the dementia, depressive and delusional symptoms, and anti-dementia medication were significantly associated with suicidal ideation. Over time, suicidal ideation decreased from severe to mild or became absent in 54% of the persons with dementia. |
| Francis B. Annor, 2019 [ | Cross- sectional | N=91 from Georgia Vital Records and Georgia Violent Death Reporting System | Patients with dementia who died by suicide | 2013-2016 | Georgia, USA | Suicide rate among persons with dementia was 9.3 per 100 000 person-years overall and substantially higher among those diagnosed in the past 12 months (424.5/100 000 person-years) |
| Phillip Chappell,2016 [ | Online survey systematic review | N=204 respondents who completed online survey | Psychologist, psychiatrist, neurologist and nurses who personally conducted SI/ SB assessments during the course of clinical trials | March 2013 | North America and Europe (83.4%) and the remainder from Asia, Latin America, and Mideast/Africa | suicidal ideation and behavior do occur in clinical trials of patients with MCI or dementia. However, the reported occurrence of Suicide Behavior (SB) and Completed Suicide (CS) appears to be lower than Suicide Ideation (SI) and may decline further with increasing severity of dementia. |
The protective and risk factors of suicide among demented residents of LTCs
| Risk factors [Ref] | Protective factors [Ref] |
| New dementia diagnoses within 1 year [ | nursing home admissions/use of LTCs [ |
| Comorbid depression [ | comorbid schizophrenia [ |
| Mild dementia/early stage [ | Late stage dementia/severe cognitive impairment [ |
| Non-Hispanic White [ | Physical limitations/fully dependent [ |
| Younger age [ | Older age [ |
| With comorbidities [ | Without comorbidities [ |
| Low social support [ | Positive social relationships and support [ |
| Low frequency of visits from relatives [ | High frequency of visits from relatives [ |
| Living in urban area [ | Living in Rural area [ |
| previous history of suicidal behavior [ | less access to lethal means of suicide [ |
| Male [ | More monitoring by mental health professionals [ |
| Anxiety and aggressive behavior [ | |
| Presence of pain/sleep disturbances [ | |
| History of inpatient psychiatric hospitalizations [ | |
| prescriptions for antidepressants and anxiolytics [ | |
| Transition to the LTC facility [ |