Suicide CTP
Suicide CTP
Suicide CTP
EPIDEMIOLOGY
Risk factors for suicide are both individual and familial. Suicidal behaviors
aggregate in families, and family history of suicidal behaviors is an independent
risk factor for suicide attempts and completed suicides. The presence of current
and lifetime psychiatric diagnoses like major depressive disorder (MDD), bipolar
disorders, anxiety disorders, alcohol and substance misuse, schizophrenia, eating
disorders, personality disorders, different types of trauma, chronic somatic
disorders, and current stressful life events are significant risk factors for suicidal
behaviors. In the context of suicide, there is a growing body of evidence showing
that exposure to early-life maltreatment can affect molecular mechanisms
involved in the regulation of behavior through methylation and histone
modification, supposed to induce behavioral deviations during the early
development, and possibly later in life, affect genes involved in crucial neural
processes. This mechanism is called epigenetics. Childhood abuse and other
detrimental environmental factors seem to target the epigenetic regulation of
genes involved in the synthesis of neurotrophic factors and neurotransmission.
MDD is strongly linked with suicide, especially if long-term comorbidity and acute
negative life events are present. The clinical picture is characterized by symptoms
like weight loss or gain, sleep disturbances, fatigue, concentration difficulties,
changes in psychomotor capabilities, feelings of worthlessness, guilt, and
recurrent thoughts of severe suicidal ideation with suicidal plans. In the
melancholic type of MDD, despondency, despair, irrational guilt, and emptiness
are profound symptoms. Patients diagnosed with dysthymia (persistent
depressive disorder) complain of irrational patterns of negative thinking and
chronic dysphoria. Depressed suicidal patients have similar risk factors for suicide
as patients with other psychiatric diagnosis, namely, living alone, being
unmarried, unemployed, and a history of previous suicide attempts. Recurrent
MDDs are robust precipitants of suicidal behaviors. Physical illnesses also increase
the risk of suicide and attempted suicide in depressed patients, especially in the
elderly population. The most common comorbidity for affective disorders in
suicidal behavior is alcohol and other substance use, multiple physical
impairments, and personality disorders. Independently of the direction
concerning the link between different forms of depression and comorbidity, it is
important from the clinical point of view to treat all disorders. The risk of suicide
varies between the different subtypes of depression. Affective temperaments like
cyclothymic disorder and anxiousness are associated with both suicide attempts
and suicide. Such temperaments, along with irritability and rapid mood switches,
are important contributors in triggering suicidal acts. Bipolar Disorders Bipolar
disorders are separated from other depressive disorders in the DSM-5
classification and are placed between the diagnostic class on depressive disorders
and schizophrenia/other psychotic disorders, in order to denote a bridge between
those two diagnostic classes with respect to symptoms, family history of
psychiatric disorders, and molecular genetic findings. Bipolar disorders constitute
a high-risk group for suicide and attempted suicide. The majority of persons with
bipolar disorders commit suicide when they are in a major depressive episode or
in a mixed depressive state. Suicide during the manic phase is rare. The
prevalence of suicide attempts is similar in both type I and type II bipolar
disorders. Comorbidity of substance use disorders, depression, and anxiety is
almost always present in persons who committed suicide. Effective
pharmacological treatment supported by psychological techniques is the
foremost strategy to prevent completed suicide. Alcohol and Substance Use
Disorders Excessive alcohol and other substance misuse leading to significant
impairment and distress are well-recognized conditions for an increased risk of
suicidal behaviors. Comorbidity with personality disorders magnifies the risk of
suicide. Suicide mortality is highest among drug users and lower, but still high,
among persons with alcohol use disorders, as well as more prevalent among
males compared to females. Alcohol and other substance misuse increase
aggressivity, impulsivity, and cause deterioration in cognitive capacity and
flexibility to find constructive coping strategies. Suicidal alcohol misusers,
however, have a fairly good psychosocial coping ability, which could make their
suicide appear more astounding. Good psychosocial functioning could potentially
explain why they did not seek treatment or receive attention from significant
others to motivate them for treatment. Triggers for suicidal behaviors in persons
with alcohol and substance use disorders are losses of important relationships,
work, economical security, and self-esteem. The more dependence the substance
users’ experience in their relationships, the greater the risk that separation may
push them into self-destructive acts. Guidelines for the treatment of alcohol and
substance misuse are published by the American Psychiatric Association (APA)
and by the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE). The duration
of treatment may vary, but it is important to use both pharmacological and
psychological treatments. Decreasing the accessibility to alcohol both on a
societal and individual level, as well as moulding attitudes toward alcohol intake
show significant results in diminishing suicide, as described during the Perestroika
period in the former USSR. Anxiety Disorders Anxiety as a risk factor for suicide
has been neglected for a long time, that is, until studies by Fawcett et al. put
forward the role of severe anxiety in precipitation of suicidal behaviors. There are
many ways to assess the severity of anxiety, and it is important that suicidal
psychiatric patients, especially those with mood disorders, substance use
disorders, and in psychotic states are assessed for the presence of severe anxiety
and treated for it. Patients who suffer from severe anxiety may sometimes deny
suicidal thoughts or suicidal intent and refuse hospitalization. It is recommended
to document in the medical journal, the patient’s decision and secure that
outpatient treatment includes frequent follow-up and, whenever possible, involve
the family. Schizophrenia and Other Psychotic Disorders In the schizophrenic
population, estimates show that approximately 5 to 10 percent die due to suicide.
Already Bleuler drew clinicians’ attention that the most serious of the
schizophrenic symptoms is the suicidal drive. Moderate-to-severe depression is
one of the most frequent features of schizophrenic patients who commit suicide.
Schizophrenics who commit suicide usually have poorer treatment compliance,
not seldom due to the side effects of antipsychotic medication like akathisia.
Suicides occur after abrupt discontinuation of medication. Negative attitudes
toward medication and treatment are generally high in both schizophrenic and
suicidal patients with other psychiatric diagnosis. Poor treatment compliance,
social isolation, and increased expectation of good performance from others and
from patients themselves, are risk factors for suicide in schizophrenics. For a long
time, there has been controversy surrounding the question whether
schizophrenics commit suicide during the intense and frightening psychotic
activity or during periods of remission. Studies found that command
hallucinations are rare among completed suicides. On the contrary, a good
premorbid functioning and higher level of education may predispose to suicide in
younger schizophrenic patients, as they experience more disruption of
performance and may have more difficulty to accept chronic illness and prospects
of mental deterioration than older schizophrenic patients. When giving
information about the diagnosis, course of illness, and treatment, one should be
aware that it is a risk situation for suicide. Eating and Adjustment Disorders
Patients with anorexia nervosa have an increased suicide risk, thus suicide risk
assessment should be included in a comprehensive clinical evaluation. Patients
with bulimia nervosa and binge eating disorders also have an increased risk of
suicidal behaviors. A high comorbidity of mental illnesses like MDD, bipolar
disorder, anxiety disorders, and borderline personality disorders (BPDs) among
persons who are underweight as well as overweight is to a great extent
responsible for the high suicide risk in all eating disorders. Treatment is often
complicated and requires behavioral therapy combined with medication and
supportive measures. Low body mass index (BMI) and low serum cholesterol have
been shown to be associated with a higher risk of attempted and completed
suicide. Prevention Organizing home visits, case management, and regular
telephone contacts with somatically ill and vulnerable elderly persons are
effective preventive methods, as it diminishes isolation and provides the
opportunity to early detect risk factors and risk situations for suicide.
Studies performed in the United States, Australia, and Europe show an association
between suicidal behaviors and chronic somatic disorders. Somatic disorders
involve physical, psychological, and social implications. They imply stress, pain,
sometimes handicaps, limited social performance, decrease in the capability to
work, and the increased need for help from others. The comorbidity of somatic
disorders with psychiatric disorders, especially with MDD and personality
disorders substantially increases the risk for suicide. Age and separation from
loved ones, loneliness, hopelessness, helplessness, and social isolation are
parameters of importance for suicide risk. The suicidal situation and the suicidal
propensity vary during the course of the somatic disorder and depend on the
treatment outcomes and pain control, as well as on psychosocial comfort. Cancer,
HIV infection and AIDS, stroke, diabetes mellitus, epilepsy, Parkinson disease,
trauma with subsequent brain damage, spinal cord injury, multiple sclerosis,
Huntington disease (HD), and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis are associated with an
elevated risk of suicide. Elderly patients with chronic or incurable diseases need to
have an adequate somatic and psychiatric treatment, as well as good psychosocial
care in times of shrinking economical resources. Different opinions on the
distribution of economical resources can sometimes be associated with advocacy
concerning euthanasia and assisted suicide.
SPECIAL POPULATIONS Children and Adolescents Poor Mental Health. Mental ill-
health is the leading cause of disability in young persons aged 10 to 24 years and
is responsible for 45 percent of the overall burden of disease in this age group.
The high prevalence of mental health disorders was shown in the Great Smoky
Mountains prospective cohort study in the United States, as well as in the
National Comorbidity Survey, also in the United States. The results of the Saving
and Empowering Young Lives in Europe (SEYLE) study showed that in a usual
school class of teenagers approximately 10 percent of young people display high-
risk behaviors like excessive alcohol and illegal drug use, heavy smoking, truancy,
etc. Thirty percent display unhealthy lifestyles like poor sleep and diet, physical
inactivity, excessive Internet/media use. Both of those groups have high levels of
depression, anxiety, and suicidal behaviors. Approximately 12.5 percent of
adolescents required qualified psychiatric and psychological help. However,
experiences from the SEYLE study in Europe and the Columbia University
TeenScreen program in the United States show that there is a fear of stigma when
screening for mental health problems in schools, and both parents and
adolescents show little trust in the mental health care systems. Therefore, the
process of destigmatization of screening for mental disorders and increasing help-
seeking behaviors is an important public health issue. SEYLE results show that
younger adolescents are more likely to adhere to rules, procedures, and
recommendations with higher attendance rates to health care system for girls and
for pupils victimized by peers. Suicidal behaviors also appear to be an important
predictor for help seeking and a predictor of referral to mental health care. Risk
for Suicide. For most adults, it is difficult to acknowledge the child’s despair and
suicidality. Caretakers as well as parents can deny serious childhood diagnosis due
to guilt feelings and frustrations when they have difficulties to handle a suicidal,
depressed child or a suicidal child with serious conduct difficulties. Suicidal
behavior in children and adolescents occurs in the context of stressful, chaotic,
and often unpredictable family events. Suicidal children and adolescents have
poor self-esteem and poor personal identify, are often truant, not seldom bullied,
and have poor school grades, which leads to a sense of inadequacy. Issues of
gender identity are well recognized as risk factors for adolescent suicides. The
families of these children and adolescents show a high incidence of affective
disorders, alcohol misuse, and other psychiatric diagnosis. The major risk factors
for suicide in young people are the presence of a psychiatric disorder, especially
affective disorder, substance misuse, and BPD. Attempted suicide is an important
risk factor for future suicide. The four comorbid clinical constellations described
by Apter et al. having a special significance for young suicides are; the
combination of schizophrenia, depression, and substance misuse; the
combination of substance misuse, conduct disorder, and depression; the
combination of affective disorder, eating disorder, and anxiety disorders; the
combination of affective disorder, personality disorder of paranoid and schizoid
type, and dissociative disorders characterized by disruption in integrated
functions of consciousness, memory, identity, or perception of the environment.
Treatment. The treatment of suicidal children and adolescents should include the
individual child and the entire family. The aim is to improve coping styles and
communication between parent and child. Psychosocial rehabilitation measures
including school consultation and academic remediation are important. The
treatment of underlying psychiatric disorders requires psychotherapeutic and
pharmacological treatment when deemed necessary. When medication is used in
the management of suicidal young persons, family can get a false sense of
security, as well as the fantasy that the problem has been solved, which lowers
motivation to work through the problems in family and school situation. If child or
adolescent manifests psychosis, then hospitalization is required. Hospitalization is
also necessary in case of alcohol and drug misuse in the context of a disruptive
home situation. If a young person perceives rejection in the family, a replacement
home can be a solution during the period of treatment and rehabilitation. Elderly
Risk Factors. Elderly persons have the highest suicide rate compared to any other
age group. Decreased economical resources after retirement, placement into
long-term care or residential care can increase the risk of suicide. The elderly
suicides are characterized by high lethality methods, social isolation, and the
presence of physical illnesses. The ratio of suicide attempt to suicide is very low
among the elderly, and therefore each suicide attempt in older persons should be
taken seriously, being an important harbinger of completed suicide. Diagnoses of
MDD are the most common in elderly suicides, followed by diagnosis of alcohol
misuse and organic brain syndrome. Changes of sleep pattern, appetite changes,
as well as somatic complaints or exacerbation of chronic concerns, which stop an
elderly person from going out can be a sign of depression. Symptoms of guilt,
sadness, or anhedonia can be masked by somatic expressions. Unconscious
negative attitudes toward the elderly may create a risk of not taking suicidal risk
in older persons seriously. Dementia It is not seldom that cognitive functions are
severely impaired and depression can sometimes be misdiagnosed as dementia.
Evidence shows that suicide risk in people with dementia is low. However, in the
period immediately after diagnosis of dementia, especially in those of younger
age, the suicide risk is high. Treatment The treatment of suicide risk in the elderly
does not differ from suicide treatment in other age groups. In cases of severe
depression, when medication does not help, electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) can
be recommended. In the treatment of the elderly, drug-to-drug interactions are
important to observe, as the elderly often have multiple medications. In talkative
therapy, it can be of value to focus on what the person has accomplished in life,
rather than to talk about what may or may not lie ahead. To discuss suicidal
ideation can be part of a process that puts one’s life into perspective, and by
acknowledging their suicidal thoughts, the clinician can help the patient move
away from the wish to die. Inclusion of family and other resources in the
community should be encouraged in order to diminish loneliness and social
isolation.
SUICIDE RISK ASSESSMENT Decisions regarding the level of suicide risk are made
every day in all clinical specialties, even if suicide is regarded as a psychiatric
domain. There are many obstacles when performing the suicide risk assessment
due to the uniqueness of each individual possessing a unique set of risk factors.
Uncontrollable environmental influences, which contribute to the outcome, are
another obstacle. Clinical Interview In suicide risk assessment, the most important
instrument is clinical inquiry. This inquiry has an impact on the suicidal patients’
communication which should be clear, empathetic, free from prior criticism, and
focus on facts and patients’ emotional and communication style. In a systematic
clinical assessment of suicide risk, the presence of severe anxiety, MDD, use of
alcohol or illicit substances, and previous suicide attempts should be covered. The
presence of suicidal communication and personality type should be scrutinized.
Previous psychiatric disorders, suicide or suicidal behaviors in the family, as well
as negative life events along with feelings of helplessness, hopelessness, sleep
problems, and impulsive behaviors should be examined. Repeated assessments
are recommended to understand the mechanisms that generate the suicidal urge
or impulse. Interview with the family or significant others is an important source
of information. However, permission by the patient must be given and it can
sometimes take time to motivate the suicidal person to involve the family. The
evaluation of the social network and quality of family support should always be
included when suicide risk assessment is done before temporary or final discharge
from the hospital. Psychometric Scales A set of scales can be used to compliment
clinical inquiry. The Suicide Intent Scale (SIS), Scale for Suicidal Ideation (SSI-C),
the Beck Hopelessness Scale, the SAD PERSONS SCALE, and the Columbia Suicide
Severity Rating Scale (C-SSRS) are used for assessing the risk of suicide. Some
biological and genetic markers have been described, but none of them has a
practical application for clinical suicide risk assessment at the present moment.
The final decision in the suicide risk assessment is always based on an intuitive
judgment and therefore the clinician should be aware of feelings toward a suicidal
patient, which can contribute to a denial of suicide risk, a rigid approach to the
patient, or even negative emotional states like ambivalence or hostility. Those
feelings and behaviors are called countertransference.
SURVIVORS
The term suicide survivors refers to those who have lost a significant other in
suicide. When suicide occurs, the family and the surrounding people experience
severe trauma and a range of reactions from shock, sense of unreality, sadness
and grief reactions, anger, and feelings of abandonment and rejection. Suicide
survivors experience a devastating event and desperately seek an explanation of
what has happened. Not seldom they take contact with the family doctor or
doctor who treated the patient and who also is a survivor of the patient’s suicide.
It can be wise to ask an experienced colleague to help with advice on how to
manage this situation. The doctor needs not only to work with their grief, but also
to assess the potential suicide risk in survivors, who have a high risk for suicide.
The development of support groups can be considered as an important step
forward to work through the aftermath of suicide in a compassionate and
supportive way, educate about grief, demystifying suicide, eliminating excessive
guilt, shame, and blaming. The WHO issued guidelines on how to form support
groups.
SPECIAL POPULATIONS Military. For both active duty and, to a lesser extent
retired, military personnel have increased rates of attempts and completions. A
recent study by Rudd et al., found that eight participants in a brief CBT treatment
(13.8 percent) versus 18 subjects (40.2 percent) treated with TAU made at least
one suicide attempt. Thus, CBT subjects were 60 percent less likely to attempt
than TAU ones. Subjects were drawn from 76 subjects who had either attempted
suicide or had suicide ideation with intent to act and were treated with TAU
versus 76 attempters or serious ideators treated with CBT + TAU. Adolescents.
Depression in adolescents is less likely to manifest the same symptoms as in
adults. Verbal or even physical aggression is just as apt to be seen as sadness,
tearfulness, etc. Giving prized possessions away (books, clothes, CDs, etc.) or
changes in behavior (becoming unruly, uncooperative, abruptly starting to use
drugs or alcohol) may be all that the parents note as changed. Similarly, a drop in
grades in a student who has always done well may be all that is observed by the
parents. More “moodiness” or more sleep irregularity are common symptoms but
not as common in adolescence as to be poor markers for depression. School-wide
suicide screening examinations, such as the Columbia Teen Screen are now widely
used in junior and senior high schools in this country to help identify those
students at increased risk for depression and suicide. The Elderly. The geriatric
population has the highest ratio of completion to attempts. That is, when they
attempt suicide, it is more frequently a lethal attempt than the methods seen in
younger populations. They are also harder to predict, partly because their
depressions are more likely to be misperceived as “normal” (“of course he’s
depressed, he’s old, feeling useless and tired, so it’s just natural”). The suicide
rates for the elderly have been the highest of any age group for approximately the
past 250 years but, beginning around the year 2000, rates in 40 to 65 year olds
rose enough to surpass the 65+ year olds. The Publicly Shamed. Defrocked clergy,
disbarred attorneys, de-licensed physicians, and other “prominent and respected”
individuals, who have became publicly shamed due to one scandal or another
(e.g., undue familiarity; child molestation; financial “mischief,” etc.) are
anecdotally reported to have suicide rates within the year following their “outing”
higher than any other subgroup. Victim-Precipitated Suicide. Also known as
suicide-by-cop, is a particularly cruel method of killing oneself since the pain it
engenders is not only to the decedent’s friends and family but also to a totally
innocent person. The unfortunate policeman who is confronted by a stranger who
appears to be homicidal and who shoots and kills that stranger thinking his own
life or some third party is in danger, ends up becoming a victim himself. The
legacy of suicide is terrible enough without making someone else responsible.
Jumping to one’s death in front of a passing train or car leaves a similar painful
legacy for innocent second parties. Physician-Assisted Suicide. Already first legal
in Oregon and now a few other states, the right for physicians to prescribe (and
administer) lethal doses of medications to terminally ill and suffering patients, will
undoubtedly expand. Although this appears humane, the potential for harm is
real and needs to be guarded against, such as families pressuring infirm and older
relatives to request an end-of-life to serve their own purposes rather than the
patient’s, as Hendin warned against in Seduced by Death. An additional related
concern is that depression is common in chronically medically ill patients and may
result in their pressing of their families to help them die, despite the fact that
most such depressions are treatable. Future Directions. What can one hope for
over the next 25 to 50 years? This writer’s wish list vis-à-vis suicide follows.
Suicide attempt and completion rates will decrease in concert with diminished
gun ownership. The likelihood of that happening is none to minimal, however.
What is more probable is a vastly improved array of medications to rapidly,
effectively, and safely treat (a) depressive and bipolar disorders, (b) substance
abuse, (c) schizophrenia, and (d) personality disorders, especially BPDs. An
apparent taste of this was provided when nearimmediate lifting of depression
appeared to arise when Ketamine was administered and was reported to be a
wonder drug. It wasn’t but that hardly rules out another drug with super-rapid
action coming along. Better pharmacological therapies would result in basic
science discoveries re depression, mania, and psychoses. Also, improved
diagnostic tools will help ensure optimal and prompt diagnoses. In addition to a
vastly improved pharmacology, would go a comparably improved psychotherapy.
CBT, DBT, and psychoanalytically oriented psychotherapy, as well as other
psychotherapies, need to be mastered by all therapists and shortened by
discerning what parts of these are most relevant to suicidal individuals.
Acknowledgment The author wishes to express his appreciation to Dr. Donna
Sudak for her invaluable bibliographic and editorial assistance with this chapter.