Reasons for Living and Dying in Suicide Attempters: A Two-year Prospective Study
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BORIS DOI
Date of Publication
2018
Publication Type
Article
Author
Brüdern, Juliane | |
Jobes, David A. |
Series
BMC psychiatry
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
1471-244X
Publisher
BioMed Central
Language
English
Publisher DOI
PubMed ID
30029631
Description
Background: The aim of this study was to explore Reasons for Living (RFL) and Reasons for Dying (RFD) of suicide attempters and their association with current and future suicidal ideation and behavior.
Method: The sample consisted of 60 patients who were admitted at a psychiatric emergency unit in Switzerland following an attempted suicide. They received treatment as usual, participated in an assessment interview and completed self-report questionnaires including written RFL and RFD responses, depressive symptoms, and suicide ideation at baseline and 6, 12 and 24 months follow-ups. Outcome measures were suicide ideation and repeated suicide attempts. Multiple imputations were used in order to address missing data.
Results: The number of RFD responses was the strongest predictor for increased suicide ideation at baseline. The number of RFL responses was not associated with suicide ideation and reattempts. RFD, depressive symptoms, and baseline suicide ideation predicted subsequent suicide reattempt up to 12 months later in simple regression analyses. Mediation analyses suggested that RFD mediated the effect of depressive symptoms at baseline on suicide ideation at 12-months follow-up. Conclusion: RFL were unrelated to the mental health of study participants and did not function as protective factor against suicide risk. RFD may be an important motivational driver in the suicidal process. Clinical interventions should focus more on the reduction of RFD than on RFL in suicidal individuals.
Method: The sample consisted of 60 patients who were admitted at a psychiatric emergency unit in Switzerland following an attempted suicide. They received treatment as usual, participated in an assessment interview and completed self-report questionnaires including written RFL and RFD responses, depressive symptoms, and suicide ideation at baseline and 6, 12 and 24 months follow-ups. Outcome measures were suicide ideation and repeated suicide attempts. Multiple imputations were used in order to address missing data.
Results: The number of RFD responses was the strongest predictor for increased suicide ideation at baseline. The number of RFL responses was not associated with suicide ideation and reattempts. RFD, depressive symptoms, and baseline suicide ideation predicted subsequent suicide reattempt up to 12 months later in simple regression analyses. Mediation analyses suggested that RFD mediated the effect of depressive symptoms at baseline on suicide ideation at 12-months follow-up. Conclusion: RFL were unrelated to the mental health of study participants and did not function as protective factor against suicide risk. RFD may be an important motivational driver in the suicidal process. Clinical interventions should focus more on the reduction of RFD than on RFL in suicidal individuals.
File(s)
File | File Type | Format | Size | License | Publisher/Copright statement | Content | |
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Brüdern_Brodbeck_accepted Reasons for Living and Dying in Suicide Attempters - A Two-year Prospective Study.pdf | text | Adobe PDF | 1.43 MB | Attribution (CC BY 4.0) | accepted | ||
s12888-018-1814-8.pdf | text | Adobe PDF | 407.19 KB | Attribution (CC BY 4.0) | published |