8 research outputs found
Suicide attempts and related factors in patients admitted to a general hospital: a ten-year cross-sectional study (1997-2007)
[Abstract] Background: Suicide and suicide attempts represent a severe problem for public health services. The aim of this study is to determine the socio-demographic and psychopathological variables associated with suicide attempts in the population admitted to a General Hospital.
Methods: An observational-descriptive study of patients admitted to the A Coruña University Hospital (Spain) during the period 1997-2007, assessed by the Consultation and Liaison Psychiatric Unit. We include n = 5,234 admissions from 4,509 patients. Among these admissions, n = 361 (6.9%) were subsequent to a suicide attempt. Admissions arising from a suicide attempt were compared with admissions occurring due to other reasons.Multivariate generalised estimating equation logistic regression models were used to examine factors associated with suicide attempts.
Results: Adjusting by age, gender, educational level, cohabitation status, being employed or unemployed, the psychiatric diagnosis at the time of the interview and the information on previous suicide attempts, we found that the variables associated with the risk of a suicide attempt were: age, psychiatric diagnosis and previous suicide attempts. The risk of suicide attempts decreases with age (OR = 0.969). Psychiatric diagnosis was associated with a higher risk of suicide attempts, with the highest risk being found for Mood or Affective Disorders (OR = 7.49), followed by Personality Disorders (OR = 7.31), and Schizophrenia and Other Psychotic Disorders (OR = 5.03).The strongest single predictive factor for suicide attempts was a prior history of attempts (OR = 23.63).
Conclusions: Age, psychopathological diagnosis and previous suicide attempts are determinants of suicide attempts
Depresión en pacientes hospitalizados en el Servicio de Medicina Interna de un Hospital General
La sintomatología afectiva y los Síndromes Depresivos, en particular la Depresión Mayor, son frecuentes en pacientes ingresados en un Servicio de Medicina Interna de un Hospital General.
Los Síndromes depresivos y su tratamiento son variables clínicas que inciden de muchas maneras, y en general, a su vez, de forma recíproca, en el desarrollo y el pronóstico de la patología médica, motivo de ingreso hospitalario.
Presentamos los resultados de una revisión bibliográfica actualizada; y los datos de nuestra propia experiencia en la Unidad de Interconsulta y Enlace del Servicio de Psiquiatría del Complejo Hospitalario Universitario de A Coruña a lo largo de una actividad profesional de más de veinte años (1990-2013)
Ethnicity and suicide attempt: analysis in bipolar disorder and schizophrenia
BACKGROUND: Evidence is mixed as to whether White Europeans are at a higher risk for suicide attempts or completions compared to other ethnic groups. The present analysis assessed whether risk for suicide attempt was associated with White European ethnicity in 907 subjects with schizophrenia or bipolar disorder. METHODS: Subjects were diagnosed using the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV, and ethnicity was determined by self-report. Subjects were recruited from psychiatric care centers in Toronto, Canada. Logistic regression correcting for clinical covariates like age, gender and diagnosis, was used in this study. RESULTS: We found no difference in suicide attempter status in white and non-white subjects who were diagnosed with schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. CONCLUSION: Our study does not support the evidence that White-European patients in North America are at higher risk for suicide attempt compared to non-European descent subjects. However, this result has to be replicated in larger studies in patients with these disorders