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Suicide After Parasuicide
Evaluate previous parasuicide even if in the remote
past Predicting suicide is a delicate matter, certainly
difficult even in groups of patients at high risk. A paper in this
issue focuses on previous parasuicide as a predictor of suicide
(p 1155) and shows that the risk persists without decline for two
decades.1 This observation is relevant for the clinical
assessment of risk of suicide and has implications for the treatment of
parasuicide as well.
In a large meta-analysis, a history of parasuicide or attempted suicide
increased the risk of suicide to 40 times that of the general
population.2 An attempted suicide that was recognised in
health care thus implied a higher risk than having a mental disorder
such as major depression, personality disorder, or dependence on
alcohol. The risk of suicide is generally most prominent during the
first months after psychiatric care.3 The risk of
repetition and consequently of suicide is believed to be highest during
the first one or two years after an episode of
parasuicide.4 5
Follow up studies of hospitalised
patients who have attempted suicide show that the initial high risk
declines each year.6 But recent studies of people who have
harmed themselves deliberately and attempted suicide show that the risk
persists for a long time.5 7
In a retrospective study of
suicide we found that the interval between first suicidal behaviour and
the suicide was related to the patient's sex and mental disorder. For
example, in patients with borderline personality disorder or
schizophrenia the suicidal process can take a long time.8
Follow up studies of parasuicide would improve if diagnostic subgroups
were taken into consideration.
Severity of the attempt indicates higher risk. Extra caution is also
warranted in situations with repeated parasuicide, especially when
these occur with increasing frequency. More extensive planning of the
current parasuicide may indicate a high risk. Mental disorder in
general and depressive disorder in particular, if present at the index
parasuicide, strengthens the risk for poor outcome. Likewise, the
presence of substance abuse at the time of parasuicide increases the
danger.9 Comorbidity such as substance abuse and another
mental disorder is also noteworthy. Concomitant somatic illness should
be assessed, especially in elderly people.10
The view that parasuicide and suicide involve totally different
populations has been found to be inaccurate.11 The
prevalence of parasuicide is high also in retrospective systematic
interview studies of suicide victims. In a study of young adults,
previous parasuicide was found in 60% of young men and 80% of young
women.8 This is a higher rate than among adults in
general. Among men of all ages, previous parasuicide was found in about
a third and among women of all ages in about two thirds. Irrespective
of age, women have higher rates of parasuicide even among those who
eventually die by suicide. Expectedly, repeated parasuicide is common
in people who commit suicide. Three or more parasuicides occurred in
17% of men and 56% of women.8
Can we rely on the answers that patients give when we question them
about suicidal ideation in emergencies? Certainly, an empathic
interview with the patient yields an honest answer in most instances.
Further, the circumstances of the parasuicide are well worth exploring
in the encounter with the patient. To what extent the verbal
presentation of suicidal thoughts is valid in assessing the risk of
suicide is still doubtful. Most people who commit suicide have
communicated such ideation in a more obvious or disguised manner. Fewer
than half of them did communicate their intention to family members
during their previous suicidal episode.8 In a study of
suicide in elderly people, the doctors responsible for treating them
were less aware of the suicidal thoughts than the family
members.12 In relation to this week's paper there is a
good reason to point at previous acts of suicidal behaviour as the most
reliable issue to penetrate in the clinical interview.1 To
pay attention to previous parasuicide in the assessment of the patient
in the emergency department is crucial, because it may indicate a
serious risk even if the act was committed several years ago.
Bo S. Runeson
Associate Professor Karolinska Institute, Department of Clinical Neuroscience,
Section for Psychiatry, St. Göran's Hospital, S-112 81 Stockholm, Sweden
| 1.
|
Jenkins GR, Hale R, Papanastassiou M, Crawford MJ, Tyrer P.
Suicide rate 22 years after parasuicide: cohort study.
BMJ
2002;
325:
1155[Free Full Text].
|
| 2.
|
Harris EC, Barraclough B.
Suicide as an outcome for mental disorders. A meta-analysis.
Brit J Psychiatry
1997;
170:
205-228[Abstract].
|
| 3.
|
Goldacre M, Seagroatt V, Hawton K.
Suicide after discharge from psychiatric inpatient care.
Lancet
1993;
342:
283-286[ISI][Medline].
|
| 4.
|
Tejedor MC, Diaz A, Castillon JJ, Pericay JM.
Attempted suicide: repetition and survival findings of a follow-up study.
Acta Psychiatr Scand
1999;
100:
205-211[ISI][Medline].
|
| 5.
|
Soukas J, Suominen K, Isometsä E, Ostamo A, Lönnqvist J.
Long-term risk factors for suicide mortality after attempted suicide findings of a 14-year follow-up study.
Acta Psychiatr Scand
2001;
104:
117-121[CrossRef][ISI][Medline].
|
| 6.
|
Rygnestad T.
A prospective 5-year follow-up study of self-poisoned patients.
Acta Psychiatr Scand
1988;
77:
328-331[ISI][Medline].
|
| 7.
|
De Moore GM, Robertson AR.
Suicide in the 18 years after deliberate self-harm. A prospective study.
Brit J Psychiatry
1996;
169:
489-494[Abstract].
|
| 8.
|
Runeson BS, Beskow J, Waern M.
The suicidal process in suicides among young people.
Acta Psychiatr Scand
1996;
93:
35-42[ISI][Medline].
|
| 9.
|
Hawton K, Fagg J, Platt S, Hawkins M.
Factors associated with suicide after parasuicide in young people.
BMJ
1993;
306:
1641-1644[ISI][Medline].
|
| 10.
|
Waern M, Runeson BS, Allebeck P, Beskow J, Rubenowitz E, Skoog I, et al.
Mental disorder in elderly suicides: a case-control study.
Am J Psychiatry
2002;
159:
450-455[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 11.
|
Beautrais AL.
Suicides and serious suicide attempts: two populations or one?
Psychol Med
2001;
31:
837-845[CrossRef][ISI][Medline].
|
| 12.
|
Waern M, Beskow J, Runeson B, Skoog I.
Suicidal feelings in the last year of life in elderly people who commit suicide.
Lancet
1999;
354:
917-918[CrossRef][ISI][Medline].
© BMJ 2002<>
http://bmj.bmjjournals.com/cgi/content/full/325/7373/1125/a

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