57 results on '"Heisel, Marnin"'
Search Results
2. Construction and validation of the area level deprivation index for health research: A methodological study based on Nepal Demographic and Health Survey.
- Author
-
Sharma, Ishor, Campbell, M. Karen, Heisel, Marnin J., Choi, Yun-Hee, Luginaah, Isaac N., Were, Jason Mulimba, Gonzalez, Juan Camilo Vargas, and Stranges, Saverio
- Subjects
DEMOGRAPHIC surveys ,RESOURCE-limited settings ,STANDARD deviations ,HEALTH surveys ,DISEASE risk factors - Abstract
Area-level factors may partly explain the heterogeneity in risk factors and disease distribution. Yet, there are a limited number of studies that focus on the development and validation of the area level construct and are primarily from high-income countries. The main objective of the study is to provide a methodological approach to construct and validate the area level construct, the Area Level Deprivation Index in low resource setting. A total of 14652 individuals from 11,203 households within 383 clusters (or areas) were selected from 2016-Nepal Demographic and Health survey. The index development involved sequential steps that included identification and screening of variables, variable reduction and extraction of the factors, and assessment of reliability and validity. Variables that could explain the underlying latent structure of area-level deprivation were selected from the dataset. These variables included: housing structure, household assets, and availability and accessibility of physical infrastructures such as roads, health care facilities, nearby towns, and geographic terrain. Initially, 26-variables were selected for the index development. A unifactorial model with 15-variables had the best fit to represent the underlying structure for area-level deprivation evidencing strong internal consistency (Cronbach's alpha = 0.93). Standardized scores for index ranged from 58.0 to 140.0, with higher scores signifying greater area-level deprivation. The newly constructed index showed relatively strong criterion validity with multi-dimensional poverty index (Pearson's correlation coefficient = 0.77) and relatively strong construct validity (Comparative Fit Index = 0.96; Tucker-Lewis Index = 0.94; standardized root mean square residual = 0.05; Root mean square error of approximation = 0.079). The factor structure was relatively consistent across different administrative regions. Area level deprivation index was constructed, and its validity and reliability was assessed. The index provides an opportunity to explore the area-level influence on disease outcome and health disparity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Application du cadre Theoretical Domains Framework pour cerner les préférences des policiers, des pompiers et des ambulanciers en matière d'accès aux soins de santé mentale dans une clinique de traitement des blessures de stress opérationnel pour les premiers répondants: une étude qualitative
- Author
-
Testa, Valerie, Bennett, Alexandria, Jutai, Jeffrey, Cantor, Zachary, Burke, Peter, McMahon, James, Carleton, R. Nicholas, Colman, Ian, Fikretoglu, Deniz, Heber, Alexandra, Leduc, Shannon, Heisel, Marnin J., Thavorn, Kednapa, Corsi, Daniel J., and Hatcher, Simon
- Abstract
Copyright of Promotion de la Santé et Prévention des Maladies Chroniques au Canada is the property of Public Health Agency of Canada and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Applying the Theoretical Domains Framework to identify police, fire, and paramedic preferences for accessing mental health care in a First Responder Operational Stress Injury Clinic: a qualitative study.
- Author
-
Testa, Valerie, Bennett, Alexandria, Jutai, Jeffrey, Cantor, Zachary, Burke, Peter, McMahon, James, Carleton, R. Nicholas, Colman, Ian, Fikretoglu, Deniz, Heber, Alexandra, Leduc, Shannon, Heisel, Marnin J., Thavorn, Kednapa, Corsi, Daniel J., and Hatcher, Simon
- Subjects
MENTAL health services ,FIRST responders ,EMERGENCY medical technicians ,CULTURAL competence ,OCCUPATIONAL roles ,SOCIAL influence - Abstract
Introduction: First responders and other public safety personnel (PSP; e.g. correctional workers, firefighters, paramedics, police, public safety communicators) are often exposed to events that have the potential to be psychologically traumatizing. Such exposures may contribute to poor mental health outcomes and a greater need to seek mental health care. However, a theoretically driven, structured qualitative study of barriers and facilitators of help-seeking behaviours has not yet been undertaken in this population. This study used the Theoretical Domains Framework (TDF) to identify and better understand critical barriers and facilitators of help-seeking and accessing mental health care for a planned First Responder Operational Stress Injury (OSI) clinic. Methods: We conducted face-to-face, one-on-one semistructured interviews with 24 first responders (11 firefighters, five paramedics, and eight police officers), recruited using purposive and snowball sampling. Interviews were analyzed using deductive content analysis. The TDF guided study design, interview content, data collection, and analysis. Results: The most reported barriers included concerns regarding confidentiality, lack of trust, cultural competency of clinicians, lack of clarity about the availability and accessibility of services, and stigma within first responder organizations. Key themes influencing help-seeking were classified into six of the TDF's 14 theoretical domains: environmental context and resources; knowledge; social influences; social/professional role and identity; emotion; and beliefs about consequences. Conclusion: The results identified key actions that can be utilized to tailor interventions to encourage attendance at a First Responder OSI Clinic. Such approaches include providing transparency around confidentiality, policies to ensure greater cultural competency in all clinic staff, and clear descriptions of how to access care; routinely involving families; and addressing stigma. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Differences in Suicide-Related Twitter Content According to User Influence.
- Author
-
Sinyor, Mark, Hartman, Maya, Zaheer, Rabia, Williams, Marissa, Pirkis, Jane, Heisel, Marnin J., Schaffer, Ayal, Redelmeier, Donald A., Cheung, Amy H., Kiss, Alex, and Niederkrotenthaler, Thomas
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. The BEACON study: an update to the protocol for a cohort study as part of an evaluation of the effectiveness of smartphone-assisted problem-solving therapy in men who present with intentional self-harm to emergency departments in Ontario.
- Author
-
Hatcher, Simon, Heisel, Marnin J., Ayonrinde, Oydeji, Corsi, Daniel, Edgar, Nicole E., Kennedy, Sidney H., Rizvi, Sakina J., Schaffer, Ayal, and Sinyor, Mark
- Subjects
PROBLEM-solving therapy ,HOSPITAL emergency services ,COHORT analysis ,CLUSTER randomized controlled trials ,MIDDLE-aged men ,SMARTPHONES - Abstract
Background: Men who present to the emergency department (ED) with self-harm are at high risk of dying by suicide, with 2.7% of men dying in the year following their presentation, more than double the rate for women (1.2%). Despite this, care received after an ED visit is highly variable and many are not assessed for psychological needs. Furthermore, the limited psychological care that is available is often not covered by provincial health insurance. Even when referrals for follow-up care are made, engagement rates are low. Previous recommendations to improve engagement include written discharge plans, caring contacts, and focused interventions targeting middle-aged men at elevated risk of dying by suicide. Blended care, the incorporation of technology into traditional care, has also been proposed as a method to increase engagement in and clinical benefits from psychotherapy. This project aims to determine whether the delivery of an evidence based treatment (problem-solving therapy (PST)) is enhanced by the addition of a custom smartphone application (BEACON) compared to usual care. Due to the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on site participation and the planned implementation, we have made several changes to the study design, primary outcome, and implementation.Method: We originally proposed a cohort study nested within a larger cluster randomized trial wherein intervention sites would deliver the blended care, and control sites, whose personnel were not aware of their participation, would continue delivering usual care. The cohort study evaluated participant level outcomes as previously described by Hatcher et al. (2020). Due to pandemic-related constraints, our number of participating sites dropped to five potential sites which left the cohort study underpowered. As such, we changed the study design to a multi-site, individual randomized controlled trial (RCT) among the five remaining sites. Participants will be randomized to six sessions of therapy (PST) alone, or to the therapy plus BEACON, and followed up for 6 months. Our primary outcome was changed to evaluate feasibility and acceptability with the aim of designing a definitive RCT. Study implementation was reimagined to allow for completely virtual/online conduct to comply with local COVID-19 and institutional restrictions on in-person activities.Conclusion: This updated protocol will provide strong results for the planning of a definitive RCT of the blended care intervention in the future, addressing areas of difficulty and concern prior to its implementation. We will evaluate the feasibility of the study intervention, assess recruitment and retention of participants, and address challenges with implementing the protocol. Lastly, we will evaluate the appropriateness of our primary outcome measure and accurately determine a sample size for a definitive RCT.Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT03473535 . Registered on March 22, 2018. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Screening for suicide risk among older adults: assessing preliminary psychometric properties of the Brief Geriatric Suicide Ideation Scale (BGSIS) and the GSIS-Screen.
- Author
-
Heisel, Marnin J. and Flett, Gordon L.
- Subjects
SUICIDE prevention ,SUICIDE risk factors ,RESEARCH evaluation ,STATISTICAL reliability ,INTERPERSONAL psychotherapy ,RESEARCH methodology evaluation ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL screening ,PSYCHOMETRICS ,RISK assessment ,MULTITRAIT multimethod techniques ,SUICIDAL ideation ,INDEPENDENT living ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,PREDICTIVE validity ,LONGITUDINAL method ,PSYCHOLOGICAL resilience ,OLD age - Abstract
To initially assess psychometric properties of two abbreviated versions of the Geriatric Suicide Ideation Scale (GSIS): a 10-item Brief Geriatric Suicide Ideation Scale (BGSIS), and a 5-item Geriatric Suicide Ideation Scale-Screen (GSIS-Screen). A series of psychometric analyses was conducted, assessing the internal consistency, test–retest reliability, construct and predictive validity of the abbreviated GSIS scales. This was done by selecting-out GSIS items from a combined dataset of studies on suicide ideation in older adults: 1) The GSIS scale development study (n = 107); 2) A clinical trial of Interpersonal Psychotherapy (IPT) modified for suicidal older adults(n = 25); 3) A longitudinal study of risk and resiliency to suicide ideation in community-residing older adults (n = 173). Overall findings demonstrated strong internal consistency, test–retest reliability, concurrent and predictive validity for the BGSIS and GSIS-Screen with older adults across community, clinical, and residential settings. Study findings support the use of the abbreviated GSIS scales when conducting research on suicide risk identification among older adults. Future research is recommended testing these scales prospectively in public health, residential, and clinical settings, in research and healthcare delivery contexts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Aging and Feeling Valued Versus Expendable During the COVID-19 Pandemic and Beyond: a Review and Commentary of Why Mattering Is Fundamental to the Health and Well-Being of Older Adults.
- Author
-
Flett, Gordon L. and Heisel, Marnin J.
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,OLDER people ,MENTAL illness ,HEALTH of older people ,INDIVIDUAL differences - Abstract
The current commentary and review examines the potentially protective role of feelings of mattering among elderly people during typical times and the current atypical times associated with the COVID-19 global pandemic. Mattering is the feeling of being important to others in ways that give people the sense that they are valued and other people care about them. We contrast this feeling with messages of not mattering and being expendable and disposable due to ageism, gaps in the provision of care, and apparently economically focused positions taken during the pandemic that disrespect the value, worth, and merits of older persons. We provide a comprehensive review of past research on individual differences in mattering among older adults and illustrate the unique role of mattering in potentially protecting older adults from mental health problems. Mattering is also discussed in terms of its links with loneliness and physical health. This article concludes with a discussion of initiatives and interventions that can be modified and enhanced to instill a sense of mattering among older adults. Key directions for future research are also highlighted along with ways to expand the mattering concept to more fully understand and appreciate the relevance of mattering among older adults. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Innovations in suicide assessment and prevention during pandemics.
- Author
-
Brenna, Connor T. A., Links, Paul S., Tran, Maxwell M., Sinyor, Mark, Heisel, Marnin J., and Hatcher, Simon
- Subjects
ANXIETY ,SOCIAL media ,LONELINESS ,MENTAL health ,PUBLIC health - Abstract
Emerging evidence, based on the synthesis of reports from past infectious disease-related public health emergencies, supports an association between previous pandemics and a heightened risk of suicide or suicide-related behaviours and outcomes. Anxiety associated with pandemic media reporting appears to be one critical contributing factor. Social isolation, loneliness, and the disconnect that can result from public health strategies during global pandemics also appear to increase suicide risk in vulnerable individuals. Innovative suicide risk assessment and prevention strategies are needed to recognise and adapt to the negative impacts of pandemics on population mental health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. The Impact of Infectious Disease- Related Public Health Emergencies on Suicide, Suicidal Behavior, and Suicidal Thoughts: A Systematic Review.
- Author
-
Zortea, Tiago C., Brenna, Connor T. A., Joyce, Mary, McClelland, Heather, Tippett, Marisa, Tran, Maxwell M., Arensman, Ella, Corcoran, Paul, Hatcher, Simon, Heisel, Marnin J., Links, Paul, O’Connor, Rory C., Edgar, Nicole E., Yevin Cha, Guaiana, Giuseppe, Williamson, Eileen, Sinyor, Mark, and Platt, Stephen
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. The association between Twitter content and suicide.
- Author
-
Sinyor, Mark, Williams, Marissa, Zaheer, Rabia, Loureiro, Raisa, Pirkis, Jane, Heisel, Marnin J, Schaffer, Ayal, Redelmeier, Donald A, Cheung, Amy H, and Niederkrotenthaler, Thomas
- Subjects
SUICIDE risk factors ,CULTURE ,HOMICIDE ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,PATIENT advocacy ,SOCIAL media ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,HEALTH ,INFORMATION resources ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,ODDS ratio - Abstract
Objective: A growing body of research has established that specific elements of suicide-related news reporting can be associated with increased or decreased subsequent suicide rates. This has not been systematically investigated for social media. The aim of this study was to identify associations between specific social media content and suicide deaths. Methods: Suicide-related tweets (n = 787) geolocated to Toronto, Canada and originating from the highest level influencers over a 1-year period (July 2015 to June 2016) were coded for general, putatively harmful and putatively protective content. Multivariable logistic regression was used to examine whether tweet characteristics were associated with increases or decreases in suicide deaths in Toronto in the 7 days after posting, compared with a 7-day control window. Results: Elements independently associated with increased subsequent suicide counts were tweets about the suicide of a local newspaper reporter (OR = 5.27, 95% CI = [1.27, 21.99]), 'other' social causes of suicide (e.g. cultural, relational, legal problems; OR = 2.39, 95% CI = [1.17, 4.86]), advocacy efforts (OR = 2.34, 95% CI = [1.48, 3.70]) and suicide death (OR = 1.52, 95% CI = [1.07, 2.15]). Elements most strongly independently associated with decreased subsequent suicides were tweets about murder suicides (OR = 0.02, 95% CI = [0.002, 0.17]) and suicide in first responders (OR = 0.17, 95% CI = [0.05, 0.52]). Conclusions: These findings largely comport with the theory of suicide contagion and associations observed with traditional news media. They specifically suggest that tweets describing suicide deaths and/or sensationalized news stories may be harmful while those that present suicide as undesirable, tragic and/or preventable may be helpful. These results suggest that social media is both an important exposure and potential avenue for intervention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. A systematic review of older adults' request for or attitude toward euthanasia or assisted-suicide.
- Author
-
Castelli Dransart, Dolores Angela, Lapierre, Sylvie, Erlangsen, Annette, Canetto, Silvia Sara, Heisel, Marnin, Draper, Brian, Lindner, Reinhard, Richard-Devantoy, Stephane, Cheung, Gary, Scocco, Paolo, Gusmão, Ricardo, De Leo, Diego, Inoue, Ken, De Techterman, Vincent, Fiske, Amy, Hong, Jin Pyo, Landry, Marjolaine, Lepage, Andrée-Anne, Marcoux, Isabelle, and Na, Peter Jongho
- Subjects
PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems ,ASSISTED suicide ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,AGE distribution ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,EUTHANASIA ,MEDLINE ,ATTITUDES toward death ,RELIGION ,EDUCATIONAL attainment ,OLD age - Abstract
Prevalence rates of death by euthanasia (EUT) and physician-assisted suicide (PAS) have increased among older adults, and public debates on these practices are still taking place. In this context, it seemed important to conduct a systematic review of the predictors (demographic, physical health, psychological, social, quality of life, religious, or existential) associated with attitudes toward, wishes and requests for, as well as death by EUT/PAS among individuals aged 60 years and over. The search for quantitative studies in PsycINFO and MEDLINE databases was conducted three times from February 2016 until April 2018. Articles of probable relevance (n = 327) were assessed for eligibility. Studies that only presented descriptive data (n = 306) were excluded. This review identified 21 studies with predictive analyses, but in only 4 did older adults face actual end-of-life decisions. Most studies (17) investigated attitudes toward EUT/PAS (9 through hypothetical scenarios). Younger age, lower religiosity, higher education, and higher socio-economic status were the most consistent predictors of endorsement of EUT/PAS. Findings were heterogeneous with regard to physical health, psychological, and social factors. Findings were difficult to compare across studies because of the variety of sample characteristics and outcomes measures. Future studies should adopt common and explicit definitions of EUT/PAS, as well as research designs (e.g. mixed longitudinal) that allow for better consideration of personal, social, and cultural factors, and their interplay, on EUT/PAS decisions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Changes in Suicide Reporting Quality and Deaths in Ontario Following Publication of National Media Guidelines.
- Author
-
Sinyor, Mark, Kiss, Alex, Williams, Marissa, Zaheer, Rabia, Pirkis, Jane, Heisel, Marnin J., Schaffer, Ayal, Redelmeier, Donald A., Cheung, Amy H., and Niederkrotenthaler, Thomas
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. The BEACON study: protocol for a cohort study as part of an evaluation of the effectiveness of smartphone-assisted problem-solving therapy in men who present with intentional self-harm to emergency departments in Ontario.
- Author
-
Hatcher, Simon, Heisel, Marnin, Ayonrinde, Oyedeji, Campbell, Julie K., Colman, Ian, Corsi, Daniel J., Edgar, Nicole E., Gillett, Lindsay, Kennedy, Sidney H., Hunt, Sophia Lakatoo, Links, Paul, MacLean, Sarah, Mehta, Viraj, Mushquash, Christopher, Raimundo, Alicia, Rizvi, Sakina J., Saskin, Refik, Schaffer, Ayal, Sidahmed, Alaaddin, and Sinyor, Mark
- Subjects
PROBLEM-solving therapy ,SOCIAL anxiety ,MEDICAL care costs ,SUICIDAL ideation ,HOSPITAL emergency services ,DRUG use testing ,ALCOHOL - Abstract
Background: Patients who present to emergency departments after intentional self-harm are at an increased risk of dying by suicide. This applies particularly to men, who represent nearly two-thirds of those who die by suicide in Ontario. One way of potentially addressing this gap is to offer a course of blended problem-solving therapy, comprised of a brief course of evidence-based psychotherapy for individuals at risk for suicide, facilitated by the use of a patient-facing smartphone application and a clinician-facing "dashboard." This approach has the potential to combine the benefits of face-to-face therapy and technology to create a novel intervention.Methods: This is a cohort study nested within a larger pragmatic multicentre pre- and post-design cluster randomised trial. Suicidal ideation assessed by the Beck Scale for Suicide Ideation is the primary outcome variable. Secondary outcome measures include depression (Patient Health Questionnaire-9), anxiety (Generalized Anxiety Disorder 7-item scale), post-traumatic stress disorder (Primary Care PTSD Screen), health-related quality of life (EuroQol 5-dimension 5-level questionnaire), meaning in life (Experienced Meaning in Life Scale), perceived social supports (Multidimensional Scale of Perceived Social Support), alcohol use (Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test), drug use (Drug Abuse Screening Test Short Form 10), problem-solving skills (Social Problem-Solving Inventory-Revised Short Form), and self-reported healthcare costs, as well as health service use measured using Ontario administrative health data. A process evaluation will also be conducted following study completion.Discussion: The cohort study will test whether better adherence to the intervention results in better outcomes. The value of the cohort study design is that we can examine in more detail certain subgroups or other variables that are not available in the larger cluster randomised trial. This trial will aim to improve standards by informing best practice in management of men who self-harm and present to hospitals in Ontario.Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov , NCT03473535 . Registered on March 22, 2018. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Enhancing the Assessment of Resiliency to Suicide Ideation among Older Adults: The Development and Initial Validation of the Reasons for Living-Suicide Resiliency Scale (RFL-SR).
- Author
-
Wadhwa, Sonia and Heisel, Marnin J.
- Subjects
EXPERIMENTAL design ,LONGITUDINAL method ,RESEARCH methodology ,PSYCHOMETRICS ,RESEARCH evaluation ,PSYCHOLOGICAL resilience ,RISK assessment ,SECONDARY analysis ,STATISTICAL reliability ,SUICIDAL ideation ,MULTITRAIT multimethod techniques ,RESEARCH methodology evaluation ,OLD age - Abstract
Objectives: To derive a brief late-life suicide resiliency scale from the 69-item Reasons for Living Scale-Older Adult version (RFL-OA). Methods: We conducted a series of secondary analyses of RFL-OA data (N = 204) from a dataset combining: 1. A follow-up assessment of nursing home residents in the Geriatric Suicide Ideation Scale (GSIS) development study; 2. A trial of Interpersonal Psychotherapy (IPT) with suicidal older adults; 3. A longitudinal study of risk and resiliency to late-life suicide ideation. We specifically assessed the distributions of RFL-OA items and their associations with suicide ideation and behavior to create an RFL-Suicide Resiliency subscale (RFL-SR); we then tested the psychometric properties of this measure's items drawn from the larger RFL-OA. Results: Nine RFL-OA items were significantly associated with suicide ideation and history of suicide behavior and were not highly correlated with social desirability. Psychometric analyses supported the internal consistency, test–retest reliability, and construct validity of this scale. Conclusions: The items of the RFL-SR demonstrated strong psychometric properties with older adults in clinical and community settings. Clinical Implications: The RFL-SR may make a useful addition to suicide risk assessment in gerontological research and clinical practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. A Psychometric Assessment of the Suicidal Behaviors Questionnaire (SBQ-5) and Geriatric Suicide Ideation Scale-Screen (GSIS-screen) in Middle-Aged and Older Men.
- Author
-
Zia, Belal, Heisel, Marnin J., Peckham, S. Benjamin, and Rosen, Sophie
- Subjects
DIAGNOSIS of mental depression ,ELDER care ,COGNITION ,DESPAIR ,LIFE skills ,MEN'S health ,PSYCHOMETRICS ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH evaluation ,RETIREMENT ,RISK assessment ,ELIGIBILITY (Social aspects) ,SUICIDAL ideation ,INDEPENDENT living ,RESEARCH methodology evaluation ,MIDDLE age ,OLD age - Abstract
Objectives. To investigate the psychometric properties of the five-item Suicidal Behaviors Questionnaire (SBQ-5) and the Geriatric Suicide Ideation Scale-Screen (GSIS-Screen, submitted) among community-residing middle-aged and older men. Methods. The SBQ-5 and GSIS-Screen were administered to 93 men, 55 years or older, who participated in an eligibility assessment (Time 1) for an upstream psychological intervention study to prevent the onset of suicide ideation among men struggling to transition to retirement. Eligible participants later completed the full GSIS and measures of depression and hopelessness at a pre-group assessment (Time 2). Results. The SBQ-5 was positively associated with the GSIS-Screen at the eligibility assessment. Internal consistency for both measures was low but acceptable. Time 1 scores on both screens predicted suicide ideation at Time 2, controlling for the intervening time lag and for baseline cognitive and physical functioning. Only the GSIS-Screen uniquely predicted future depression and hopelessness ratings. Conclusions. The SBQ-5 and the GSIS-Screen have acceptable psychometric properties among middle-aged and older community-residing men; the GSIS-Screen is more closely associated with later-life suicide risk factors. Clinical Implications. Brief screening tools may be of use in effectively identifying suicide ideation in community-residing middle-aged and older men. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Meaning-Centered Men's Groups: Initial Findings of an Intervention to Enhance Resiliency and Reduce Suicide Risk in Men Facing Retirement.
- Author
-
Heisel, Marnin J., Moore, Sharon L., Flett, Gordon L., Norman, Ross M. G, Links, Paul S., Eynan, Rahel, O'Rourke, Norm, Sarma, Sisira, Fairlie, Paul, Wilson, Kimberley, Farrell, Beverly, Grunau, Mara, Olson, Robert, and Conn, David
- Subjects
PREVENTION of mental depression ,RETIREMENT & psychology ,SUICIDE prevention ,SUICIDE risk factors ,DESPAIR ,GERIATRIC psychiatry ,GROUP psychotherapy ,HEALTH promotion ,HEALTH status indicators ,LIFE ,LONELINESS ,MEN'S health ,PSYCHOLOGICAL resilience ,SATISFACTION ,WELL-being ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,SUICIDAL ideation ,SEVERITY of illness index ,TREATMENT duration - Abstract
Objectives: To assess the preliminary effectiveness of Meaning-Centered Men's Groups (MCMG), a 12-session existentially-oriented, community-based, psychological group intervention designed to enhance psychological resiliency and prevent the onset or exacerbation of suicide ideation among men who are concerned about or struggling with the transition to retirement. Methods: We recruited 30 men (n= 10 per group), 55 years and older (M= 63.7, SD= 4.1) from community settings to participate in a course of MCMG to be delivered in a community center. Participants completed eligibility, pre-, mid-, and post-group assessments of suicide ideation and psychological risk and resiliency factors. Results: Participants experienced significant increases in attitudinal sources of meaning in life, psychological well-being, life satisfaction, retirement satisfaction, and general health, and decreases in depression, hopelessness, loneliness, and suicide ideation. Conclusions: Preliminary findings suggest that MCMG is a novel men's mental health intervention that may help to enhance psychological well-being and potentially reduce the severity or prevent the onset of symptoms of depression, hopelessness, and suicide ideation. Clinical Implications: Upstream psychological interventions may serve an important role in mental health promotion and suicide prevention with potentially vulnerable individuals facing challenging life transitions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Last Words: Are There Differences in Psychosocial and Clinical Antecedents Among Suicide Decedents Who Leave E-Notes, Paper Notes, or No Note?
- Author
-
Eynan, Rahel, Shah, Ravi, Heisel, Marnin Jori, Eden, David, Jhirad, Reuven, and Links, Paul S.
- Subjects
SUICIDE ,TEXT messages ,HELP-seeking behavior ,REGRESSION analysis ,MULTIVARIATE analysis - Abstract
Objective: Only a minority of suicide decedents leave a suicide note. Typically, the notes are handwritten on paper; however, electronic suicide notes have been reported with increasing frequency. This emerging phenomenon remains generally under-researched. The aim of this study was to compare the psychosocial and clinical antecedents of suicide decedents who left E-notes with those who left paper notes or no notes.Method: The study was embedded in the Southwestern Ontario Suicide Study (SOSS). The SOSS was a three-year case series of consecutive deaths by suicide that occurred in the region between 2012 and 2014. Data on psychosocial and clinical antecedents were collected with a modified version of the Manchester questionnaire used in the UK.Results: Of the 476 suicides files reviewed, 45.8% contained a suicide note. A total of 383 separate suicide notes were left: 74.3% were paper notes and 25.7% were E-notes. The results of the multivariate regression analyses indicate that the likelihood of leaving a suicide note was negatively associated with a history of admissions to a mental health unit, while the likelihood of leaving an E-note was negatively associated with age, positively associated with presence of a mental disorder, and negatively associated with history of hospital admissions.Conclusions: Future studies with larger samples need to consider the timing of the text messages, and appraise whether there was the intent of seeking help or rescue in the text messages. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Psychometric validation of the Geriatric Suicide Ideation Scale (GSIS) among older adults with bipolar disorder.
- Author
-
O'Rourke, Norm, Heisel, Marnin J., Canham, Sarah L., Sixsmith, Andrew, Yaghoubi-Shahir, Hamed, and King, David B.
- Subjects
BIPOLAR disorder ,ALCOHOLISM ,COGNITION ,STATISTICAL correlation ,MENTAL depression ,PSYCHOMETRICS ,REGRESSION analysis ,SATISFACTION ,SLEEP ,SUICIDAL ideation ,RESEARCH methodology evaluation ,OLD age ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Objectives: Across age groups, bipolar disorder (BD) carries the greatest risk of death by suicide of all psychiatric conditions; 25%-50% of those with BD will make one or more suicide attempt. Psychometrically sound instruments are required to reliably measure suicide ideation and risk of self-harm for older adults with BD. For this study, we validate the geriatric suicide ideation scale (GSIS) with adults 50+ years with BD.Methods: We recruited a global sample of 220 older adults with BD (M = 58.50 years of age) over 19 days using socio-demographically targeted, social media advertising and online data collection. To demonstrate the construct validation of GSIS responses by older adults with BD, we computed correlations and performed regression analyses to identify predictors of suicide ideation.Results: Our analyses support a four-factor model of responses to the GSIS (ideation, death ideation, loss of personal and social worth, and perceived meaning in life) measuring a higher order latent construct. Older adults with BD reporting low satisfaction with life and current depressive symptoms, and who misuse alcohol, report significantly higher levels of suicide ideation. Sleep quality and cognitive failures are also correlated with GSIS responses.Conclusions: Results support the factorial validity of the GSIS with older adults with BD. Similar to other populations, the GSIS measures a four-factor structure of suicide ideation. Across BD subtypes, the GSIS appears to reliably measure suicide ideation among older adults with BD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Media Guidelines for Reporting on Suicide: 2017 Update of the Canadian Psychiatric Association Policy Paper.
- Author
-
Sinyor, Mark, Schaffer, Ayal, Heisel, Marnin J., Picard, André, Adamson, Gavin, Cheung, Christian P., Katz, Laurence Y., Jetly, Rakesh, and Sareen, Jitender
- Subjects
PSYCHIATRY ,SUICIDE ,BOARDS of directors ,PSYCHIATRIC research ,MEDICINE ,SOCIETIES ,MASS media ,MEDICAL protocols ,MEDICAL societies - Abstract
This paper has been substantially revised by the Canadian Psychiatric Association's Research Committee and approved for republication by the CPA's Board of Directors on May 3, 2017. The original policy paper1 was developed by the Scientific and Research Affairs Standing Committee and approved by the Board of Directors on November 10, 2008. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Predictors of suicide ideation among older adults with bipolar disorder.
- Author
-
O'Rourke, Norm, Heisel, Marnin J., Canham, Sarah L., Sixsmith, Andrew, and null, null
- Subjects
SUICIDE & psychology ,GERIATRIC psychology ,DIAGNOSIS of bipolar disorder ,MENTAL depression ,COGNITION disorders - Abstract
Objectives: Bipolar disorder (BD) carries the greatest risk of death by suicide of all psychiatric conditions as 25%–50% of those with BD will make one or more suicide attempt, and about 15% will intentionally end their lives. Among young adults with BD, substance misuse, medication non-adherence, age at onset, and comorbid psychiatric conditions each predict self-harm. It is currently unclear if these same factors or others predict suicide ideation among older adults with BD. Methods: We recruited a global sample of 220 older adults with BD over 19 days using socio-demographically targeted, social media advertising and online data collection (Mean = 58.50, SD = 5.42; range 50 to 81 years). Path analyses allowed us to identify direct and indirect predictors of suicide ideation among older adults with BD. Results: Cognitive failures (perception, memory, and motor function), depressive symptoms, alcohol misuse, and dissatisfaction with life as direct predictors of suicide ideation; duration of BD symptoms and medication non-adherence emerged as indirect predictors. Of note, the significant impact of sleep on suicide ideation is indirect via depressive symptoms, cognitive failures, medication non-adherence and life dissatisfaction. Conclusions: As with young adults with BD, alcohol misuse and medication non-adherence emerged as significant predictors of suicide ideation. In addition, cognitive failures directly and indirectly predict suicide ideation in this sample of older adults with BD. Population aging and treatment efficacy are leading to ever growing numbers of older adults with BD. Both direct and indirect predictors of suicide ideation need to be considered in future BD research and treatment planning. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. A qualitative study of a blended therapy using problem solving therapy with a customised smartphone app in men who present to hospital with intentional self-harm.
- Author
-
Mackie, Craig, Dunn, Nicole, MacLean, Sarah, Testa, Valerie, Heisel, Marnin, and Hatcher, Simon
- Subjects
SELF-injurious behavior ,GROUNDED theory ,INTERVIEWING ,RESEARCH methodology ,COMPUTERS in medicine ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,PROBLEM solving ,PSYCHOTHERAPY ,TECHNOLOGY ,THERAPEUTICS ,TRUST ,QUALITATIVE research ,THEMATIC analysis ,MOBILE apps - Abstract
Background Blended therapy describes the use of computerised therapy combined with face-to-face therapy to extend the depth, range and nature of the face-to-face therapy. We wanted to develop a treatment manual for a randomised trial of blended therapy combining face-to-face problem solving and a smartphone app in men who present to hospital with self-harm. Objective To develop a treatment manual and to describe the experience of receiving and delivering a blended therapy. Methods After completion of the blended therapy, semistructured qualitative interviews were conducted with participants to describe their experience of the treatment. Two independent coders analysed the material using a thematic, grounded theory approach. Findings Seven men were enrolled in the study, and six completed the qualitative interviews. The two main themes identified were of trust and connection. Participants attended 85% of their appointments. conclusions In the treatment manual, we emphasised the themes of trust and connection by allowing time to discuss the app in the face-to-face to sessions, ensuring that therapists are familiar with the app and know how to respond to technical queries. Identification of trust and connection generates novel questions about the importance of the therapeutic alliance with technology rather than with people. clinical implications Clinicians and app developers need to pay attention to the therapeutic relationship with technology as trust and good communication can be easily damaged, resulting in disengagement with the app. Blended therapy may result in increased adherence to face-to-face sessions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Enhancing Psychological Resiliency in Older Men Facing Retirement with Meaning-Centered Men's Groups.
- Author
-
Heisel, Marnin J.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Does Recognition of Meaning in Life Confer Resiliency to Suicide Ideation Among Community-Residing Older Adults? A Longitudinal Investigation.
- Author
-
Heisel, Marnin J. and Flett, Gordon L.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Reasons for living, meaning in life, and suicide ideation: investigating the roles of key positive psychological factors in reducing suicide risk in community-residing older adults.
- Author
-
Heisel, Marnin J., Neufeld, Eva, and Flett, Gordon L.
- Subjects
PSYCHOMETRICS ,SUICIDE prevention ,SUICIDE risk factors ,COGNITION ,STATISTICAL correlation ,MENTAL depression ,DISCRIMINANT analysis ,INTERVIEWING ,LIFE ,LIFE skills ,LONELINESS ,LONGITUDINAL method ,MARITAL status ,RESEARCH methodology ,RESEARCH evaluation ,RESEARCH funding ,SCALE analysis (Psychology) ,SELF-evaluation ,MATHEMATICAL variables ,MULTIPLE regression analysis ,SOCIAL support ,STATISTICAL reliability ,SUICIDAL ideation ,INDEPENDENT living ,SEVERITY of illness index ,RESEARCH methodology evaluation ,DATA analysis software ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,OLD age - Abstract
Objectives:To investigate the roles of reasons for living (RFL) and meaning in life (MIL) in potentially promoting mental health and well-being and protecting against suicide ideation among community-residing older adults and to investigate the psychometric properties of the Reasons for Living Scale-Older Adult version (RFL-OA). Method:Of 173 older adults initially recruited into a longitudinal study on late-life suicide ideation, 109 completed the RFL-OA and measures of cognitive and physical functioning and positive and negative psychological factors at a two-year follow-up assessment. We tested a model in which RFL and MIL protect against suicide ideation, controlling for demographic and clinical factors. We also assessed the psychometric properties of the RFL-OA in community-residing older adults, investigating its internal consistency and its convergent (MIL, perceived social support, and life satisfaction), divergent (loneliness, depressive symptom severity, and suicide ideation), and discriminant validity (cognitive and physical functioning). Results:RFL-OA scores explained significant variance in suicide ideation, controlling for age, sex, depressive symptom severity, and loneliness. MIL explained significant unique variance in suicide ideation, controlling for these factors and RFL, and MIL significantly mediated the association between RFL and suicide ideation. Psychometric analyses indicated strong internal consistency (α = .94), convergent, divergent, and discriminant validity for the RFL-OA relative to positive and negative psychological factors and cognitive and physical functioning. Conclusion:These findings add to a growing body of literature suggesting merit in investigating positive psychological factors together with negative factors when assessing suicide risk and planning psychological services for older adults. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Investigating the psychometric properties of the Geriatric Suicide Ideation Scale (GSIS) among community-residing older adults.
- Author
-
Heisel, Marnin J. and Flett, Gordon L.
- Subjects
PSYCHOMETRICS ,SUICIDE prevention ,SUICIDAL ideation ,ANALYSIS of variance ,STATISTICAL correlation ,MENTAL depression ,DESPAIR ,DISCRIMINANT analysis ,INTERVIEWING ,LONELINESS ,LONGITUDINAL method ,MARITAL status ,RESEARCH methodology ,RESEARCH evaluation ,RESEARCH funding ,PSYCHOLOGICAL resilience ,SATISFACTION ,SCALE analysis (Psychology) ,STATISTICS ,T-test (Statistics) ,DATA analysis ,ACTIVITIES of daily living ,SOCIAL support ,STATISTICAL reliability ,WELL-being ,PREDICTIVE validity ,INDEPENDENT living ,RESEARCH methodology evaluation ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,INTRACLASS correlation ,OLD age ,DIAGNOSIS - Abstract
Objectives:To investigate the psychometric properties of the Geriatric Suicide Ideation Scale (GSIS) among community-residing older adults. Method:We recruited 173 voluntary participants, 65 years and older, into a 2+ year longitudinal study of the onset or exacerbation of depressive symptoms and suicide ideation. We assessed the internal consistency of the GSIS and its four component subscales, and its shorter and longer duration test–retest reliability, convergent (depression, social hopelessness, and loneliness), divergent (psychological well-being, life satisfaction, perceived social support, and self-rated health), discriminant (basic and instrumental activities of daily living and social desirability), criterion (history of suicide behavior), and predictive validity (future suicide ideation). Results:The GSIS demonstrated strong test–retest reliability and internal consistency. Baseline GSIS scores were significantly positively associated with suicide risk factors, negatively associated with potential resiliency factors, and not associated with functional impairment or social desirability. GSIS scores significantly differentiated between participants with as compared to those without a history of suicide behavior. Baseline GSIS scores significantly predicted suicide ideation at a 2+ year follow-up assessment. Conclusion:Findings suggest strong measurement characteristics for the GSIS with community-residing older adults, including impressive consistency over time. These results are consistent with research attesting to the empirical and pragmatic strengths of this measure. These findings have implications for the monitoring of suicide risk when aiming to enhance mental health and well-being and prevent suicide in later life. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Do Meaning in Life and Purpose in Life Protect Against Suicide Ideation Among Community-Residing Older Adults?
- Author
-
Heisel, Marnin J. and Flett, Gordon L.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. The Destructiveness of Perfectionism Revisited: Implications for the Assessment of Suicide Risk and the Prevention of Suicide.
- Author
-
Flett, Gordon L., Hewitt, Paul L., and Heisel, Marnin J.
- Subjects
SUICIDE prevention ,SUICIDE risk factors ,DESPAIR ,SELF-perception ,PATIENT-centered care - Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. SPARKLE (Subtypes of Ischaemic Stroke Classification System), Incorporating Measurement of Carotid Plaque Burden: A New Validated Tool for the Classification of Ischemic Stroke Subtypes.
- Author
-
Bogiatzi, Chrysi, Wannarong, Thapat, McLeod, a. Ian, Heisel, Marnin, Hackam, Daniel, and Spence, J. David
- Abstract
Background: Previous classification systems of acute ischemic stroke (Causative Classification System, CCS, of acute ischemic stroke, Trial of Org 10172 in Acute Stroke Treatment, TOAST) established the diagnosis of large artery disease (LAD) based on the presence or absence of carotid stenosis. However, carotid plaque burden is a stronger predictor of cardiovascular risk than stenosis. Our objective was to update definitions of ischemic stroke subtypes to improve the detection of LAD and to assess the validity and reliability of a new classification system: SPARKLE (Subtypes of Ischaemic Stroke Classification System). Methods: In a retrospective review of clinical research data, we compared three stroke subtype classifications: CCS, TOAST and SPARKLE. We analyzed a random sample of 275 patients presenting with minor stroke or transient ischemic attack (TIA) in an Urgent TIA Clinic in London, Ont., Canada, between 2002 and 2012. Results: There was substantial overall agreement between SPARKLE and CCS (κ = 0.75), with significant differences in the rate of detection of LAD, cardioembolic and undetermined causes of stroke or TIA. The inter-rater reliability of SPARKLE was substantial (κ = 0.76) and the intra-rater reliability was excellent (κ = 0.91). Conclusion: SPARKLE is a valid and reliable classification system, providing advantages compared to CCS and TOAST. The incorporation of plaque burden into the classification of LAD increases the proportion of cases attributable to LAD and reduces the proportion classified as being of 'undetermined' etiology. © 2014 S. Karger AG, Basel [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. The Destructiveness of Perfectionism Revisited: Implications for the Assessment of Suicide Risk and the Prevention of Suicide.
- Author
-
Flett, Gordon L., Hewitt, Paul L., and Heisel, Marnin J.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Family Connectedness Moderates the Association Between Living Alone and Suicide Ideation in a Clinical Sample of Adults 50 Years and Older.
- Author
-
Purcell, Bonnie, Heisel, Marnin J., Speice, Jenny, Franus, Nathan, Conwell, Yeates, and Duberstein, Paul R.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Detection of depression in older adults by family and friends: distinguishing mood disorder signals from the noise of personality and everyday life.
- Author
-
Duberstein, Paul R., Yan Ma, Chapman, Benjamin P., Conwell, Yeates, McGriff, Joanne, Coyne, James C., Franus, Nathan, Heisel, Marnin J., Kaukeinen, Kimberly A., Sörensen, Silvia, Xin M. Tu, and Lyness, Jeffrey M.
- Abstract
Background: The capacity of friends and family member informants to make judgments about the presence of a mood disorder history in an older primary care patient has theoretical, clinical, and public health significance. This study examined the accuracy of informant-reported mood disorder diagnoses in a sample of primary care patients aged 65 years or older. We hypothesized that the accuracy (sensitivity and specificity) of informant reports would vary with the patient's personality.Methods: Hypotheses were tested in 191 dyads consisting of patients and their friends or relatives (informants) recruited from primary care settings. Gold-standard mood disorder diagnoses were established at consensus conferences based on a review of medical charts and data collected in a structured interview with the patient. Patients completed an assessment battery that included the NEO-Five Factor Inventory.Results: Sensitivity and specificity of informant-derived mood disorder diagnoses were related to patient personality. Sensitivity of informant-derived lifetime mood disorder diagnoses was compromised by higher Extraversion and higher Agreeableness. Specificity of informant-derived lifetime mood disorder diagnoses was compromised by lower Agreeableness and higher Conscientiousness.Conclusion: Patient personality has implications for the accuracy of mood disorder histories provided by friends and family members. Given that false negatives can have grave consequences, we recommend that practitioners be particularly vigilant when interpreting collateral information about their extraverted, agreeable patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Concordance of self- and proxy-reported suicide ideation in depressed adults 50 years of age or older.
- Author
-
Heisel MJ, Conwell Y, Pisani AR, Duberstein PR, Heisel, Marnin J, Conwell, Yeates, Pisani, Anthony R, and Duberstein, Paul R
- Abstract
Objective: To assess whether social supports (proxies) can detect the presence of suicide ideation in a clinical sample of depressed adults 50 years of age or older, and to additionally assess the potential impact of depression symptom severity on patient-proxy concordance in reports of patient suicide ideation.Method: Cross-sectional data were collected regarding Axis I diagnoses, severity of depressive symptoms, and suicide ideation in a clinical sample of 109 patients 50 years of age and older. Patients were administered study measures by trained interviewers. Patients' social supports completed proxy measures of these same variables. We assessed concordance in self- and proxy-reported suicide ideation, employing global suicide ideation items derived from depression scales and more fine-grained suicide ideation items drawn from multi-item suicide ideation measures. We investigated patient-proxy concordance regarding the presence of patient suicide ideation.Results: Patients who endorsed suicide ideation and were concordantly seen by their social supports to be suicidal reported significantly greater depressive symptom severity than patients concordantly reported to be nonsuicidal. Patients' social supports reported significantly less depressive symptom severity in patients who endorsed suicide ideation yet who did not appear to be suicidal to them.Conclusions: Our findings suggest that family and friends can broadly ascertain the presence of suicide ideation in depressed middle-aged and older adults, yet in doing so may largely be responding to their broad perceptions of depressive symptom severity in patients and not specifically to the presence of suicidal thoughts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Concordance of Self- and Proxy -reported Suicide Ideation in Depressed Adults 50 Years of Age or Older.
- Author
-
Heisel, Marnin J., Conwell, Yeates, Pisani, Anthony R., and Duberstein, Paul R.
- Subjects
SUICIDAL behavior ,SOCIAL support ,CROSS-sectional method ,OLDER people - Abstract
Copyright of Canadian Journal of Psychiatry is the property of Sage Publications Inc. and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Association of Alexithymia and Depression Symptom Severity in Adults Aged 50 Years and Older.
- Author
-
Bamonti, Patricia M., Heisel, Marnin J., Topciu, Raluca A., Franus, Nathan, Talbot, Nancy L., and Duberstein, Paul R.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Development and Psychometric Evaluation of the Reasons for Living—Older Adults Scale: A Suicide Risk Assessment Inventory.
- Author
-
Edelstein, Barry A., Heisel, Marnin J., McKee, Deborah R., Martin, Ronald R., Koven, Lesley P., Duberstein, Paul R., and Britton, Peter C.
- Subjects
PSYCHOLOGICAL testing of older people ,GERIATRIC psychology ,SUICIDAL behavior ,PSYCHOLOGICAL resilience ,SUICIDE risk factors ,SUICIDAL ideation - Abstract
Purpose: The purposes of these studies were to develop and initially evaluate the psychometric properties of the Reasons for Living Scale—Older Adult version (RFL-OA), an older adults version of a measure designed to assess reasons for living among individuals at risk for suicide. Design and Methods: Two studies are reported. Study 1 involved instrument development with 106 community-dwelling older adults, and initial psychometric evaluation with a second sample of 119 community-dwelling older adults. Study 2 evaluated the psychometric properties of the RFL-OA in a clinical sample. One hundred eighty-one mental health patients 50 years or older completed the RFL-OA and measures of depression, suicide ideation at the current time and at the worst point in one's life, and current mental status and physical functioning. Results: Strong psychometric properties were demonstrated for the RFL-OA, with high internal consistency (Cronbach's alpha coefficient). Convergent validity was evidenced by negative associations among RFL-OA scores and measures of depression and suicide ideation. RFL-OA scores predicted current and worst-episode suicide ideation above and beyond current depression. Discriminant validity was evidenced with measures of current mental status and physical functioning. Criterion-related validity was also demonstrated with respect to lifetime history of suicidal behavior. Implications: These findings provide preliminary support for the validity and reliability of the RFL-OA. The findings also support the potential value of attending to reasons for living during clinical treatment with depressed older adults and others at risk for suicide. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Reasons for Living, Hopelessness, and Suicide Ideation Among Depressed Adults 50 Years or Older.
- Author
-
Britton, Peter C., Duberstein, Paul R., Conner, Kenneth R., Heisel, Marnin J., Hirsch, Jameson K., and Conwell, Yeates
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Elements of affective instability associated with suicidal behaviour in patients with borderline personality disorder.
- Author
-
Links, Paul S., Eynan, Rahel, Heisel, Marnin J., and Nisenbaum, Rosane
- Subjects
SUICIDAL behavior ,SUICIDAL ideation ,BORDERLINE personality disorder ,SELF-destructive behavior ,MOOD (Psychology) ,PERSONALITY disorders ,PATIENTS ,PSYCHIATRY ,PATHOLOGICAL psychology - Abstract
Copyright of Canadian Journal of Psychiatry is the property of Sage Publications Inc. and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Older Adult Psychological Assessment: Current Instrument Status and Related Considerations.
- Author
-
Edelstein, Barry A., Woodhead, Erin L., Segal, Daniel L., Heisel, Marnin J., Bower, Emily H., Lowery, Angela J., and Stoner, Sarah A.
- Subjects
OLDER people ,PSYCHOLOGICAL tests ,PSYCHODIAGNOSTICS ,DEPRESSION in old age ,ANXIETY in old age ,SLEEP disorders - Abstract
The psychological assessment of older adults is often challenging due to the frequent co-morbidity of mental and physical health problems, multiple medications, interactions among medications, age-related sensory and cognitive deficits, and the paucity of assessment instruments with psychometric support for their use with older adults. First, psychological assessment instruments for examining five important clinical areas (suicide ideation, sleep disorders, anxiety, depression, and personality) are discussed in light of the most current research regarding their psychometric properties and suitability for use with older adults. Instruments developed specifically for older adults are distinguished from instruments developed for younger adults that have some psychometric support for their use with older adults. Second, the potential sensory deficits that could compromise assessment, factors to consider in light of these deficits, and accommodations that can be made to minimize their effects are discussed [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Narcissistic Personality and Vulnerability to Late-Life Suicidality.
- Author
-
Heisel, Marnin J., Links, Paul S., Conn, David, Van Reekum, Robert, and Flett, Gordon L.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Future orientation moderates the relationship between functional status and suicide ideation in depressed adults.
- Author
-
Hirsch, Jameson K., Duberstein, Paul R., Conner, Kenneth R., Heisel, Marnin J., Beckman, Anthony, Franus, Nathan, and Conwell, Yeates
- Subjects
SUICIDAL behavior ,MENTAL depression ,DEPRESSED persons ,SUICIDE ,DESPAIR - Abstract
Functional impairment might amplify suicide risk in later life. A positive view of the future may reduce this risk. We tested the hypothesis that hopelessness and positive future orientation moderate the association between functional status and suicide ideation in a sample of 136 patients, 55 years of age or older, in treatment for depression. Future orientation moderated the association between functional status and suicide ideation; hopelessness did not. Although prospective research is needed to test more rigorously the hypothesized protective role of positive future orientation, our data suggest that treatments designed to enhance future orientation might decrease suicide risk. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. AFFECTIVE INSTABILITY AND SUICIDAL IDEATION AND BEHAVIOR IN PATIENTS WITH BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER.
- Author
-
Links, Paul S., Eynan, Rahel, Heisel, Marnin J., Barr, Aila, Korzekwa, Marilyn, McMain, Shelley, and Ball, Jeffrey S.
- Subjects
METHODOLOGY ,SUICIDE ,BORDERLINE personality disorder ,SUICIDAL behavior ,REGRESSION analysis ,MOOD (Psychology) - Abstract
This study employed an Experience Sampling Methodology (ESM) to test whether various elements of affective instability can predict future suicide ideation in patients with borderline personality disorder (BPD] and a history of recurrent suicidal behavior. Eighty-two individuals with BPD and a history of recurrent suicidal behavior were followed prospectively for one month during which time they recorded their current mood states, 6 times daily over three weeks. Accounting for a set of robust suicide risk factors in multiple regression analyses, only negative mood intensity was significantly related to intensity of self-reported suicide ideation and to number of suicidal behaviors over the past year. Other elements of affective instability examined (e.g., mood amplitude, dyscontrol, and reactivity) were not associated with future suicide ideation or with recent suicidal behavior. Affective instability in patients with BPD is highly variable from one individual to another and is characterized by high levels of intense negative mood. These negative mood states, versus other aspects of mood variability, seem to be more closely tied to the occurrence of suicidal ideation and behavior. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Suicide in Older Adults: How Do We Detect Risk and What Can We Do About It?
- Author
-
Duberstein, Paul and Heisel, Marnin J.
- Subjects
SUICIDE ,OLDER people ,MEN ,SUICIDAL behavior of women ,MARITAL status - Abstract
The article discusses suicide in older adults. It is revealed that older adults have higher rates of suicide in comparison with younger adults in many industrialized nations. A comparison of suicide rates between men and women in the U.S. is offered. It is said that marital status influences suicide rates.
- Published
- 2006
44. Suicide and its prevention among older adults.
- Author
-
Heisel, Marnin J.
- Subjects
SUICIDE prevention ,OLDER people ,SUICIDE victims ,MORTALITY ,MENTAL health ,SUICIDAL behavior ,MENTAL illness ,SOCIAL networks ,PUBLIC health ,OLDER men with mental illness ,PSYCHIATRIC epidemiology ,SUICIDE & psychology ,COMPARATIVE studies ,HEALTH status indicators ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,PSYCHOLOGY ,RESEARCH ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,EVALUATION research ,MENTAL health services administration - Abstract
Objective: To review the research on the epidemiology, risk and resiliency, assessment, treatment, and prevention of late-life suicide.Method: I reviewed mortality statistics. I searched MEDLINE and PsycINFO databases for research on suicide risk and resiliency and for randomized controlled trials with suicidal outcomes. I also reviewed mental health outreach and suicide prevention initiatives.Results: Approximately 12/100,000 individuals aged 65 years or over die by suicide in Canada annually. Suicide is most prevalent among older white men; risk is associated with suicidal ideation or behaviour, mental illness, personality vulnerability, medical illness, losses and poor social supports, functional impairment, and low resiliency. Novel measures to assess late-life suicide features are under development. Few randomized treatment trials exist with at-risk older adults.Conclusions: Research is needed on risk and resiliency and clinical assessment and interventions for at-risk older adults. Collaborative outreach strategies might aid suicide prevention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Validity of the SF-36 Five-Item Mental Health Index for Major Depression in Functionally Impaired, Community-Dwelling Elderly Patients.
- Author
-
Friedman, Bruce, Heisel, Marnin, and Delavan, Rachel
- Subjects
MENTAL health of older people ,MENTAL depression ,ELDER care ,MENTAL health ,GERIATRIC psychiatry ,GERIATRICS - Abstract
Objectives: To examine criterion and construct validity of the five-item Mental Health Index (MHI-5) of the 36-item Short Form health survey (SF-36) in relation to the presence of major depression in functionally impaired, community-dwelling elderly patients and of eight subsamples defined by cognitive functioning, levels of functional impairment, and proxy report versus self-report. Design: Cross-sectional observational. Setting: Nineteen counties in western New York, West Virginia, and Ohio. Participants: One thousand four hundred forty-four functionally impaired, community-dwelling Medicare beneficiaries aged 65 and older who participated in the Medicare Primary and Consumer-Directed Care Demonstration. Measurements: MHI-5, Mini-International Neuropsychiatric Interview Major Depressive Episode (MINI-MDE) module. Results: The MHI-5 demonstrated sufficient criterion validity (area under the receiver operating characteristic curve=0.837; sensitivity=78.7% and specificity=72.1% using a cutpoint of 59/60) with respect to the presence of depression for the entire sample. A significant correlation between MHI-5 scores and presence of major depression as identified using the MINI-MDE (Spearman correlation=−0.426, P<.001), a strong correlation between the MHI-5 and the SF-36 role emotional scale (Spearman correlation=0.522) and a weak correlation with the SF-36 physical functioning scale (Spearman correlation=0.133) provided evidence for construct validity. Additional evidence is provided by decline in mean MHI-5 score as level of formal education and number of close friends and relatives decreased. All eight subsamples demonstrated similar criterion and construct validity. A Cronbach alpha of 0.794 demonstrated internal consistency reliability. Conclusion: This study provides evidence for adequate criterion and construct validity of the MHI-5 in relation to the presence of major depression among functionally impaired, community-dwelling elderly Medicare patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Psychometric Properties of the 15-Item Geriatric Depression Scale in Functionally Impaired, Cognitively Intact, Community-Dwelling Elderly Primary Care Patients.
- Author
-
Friedman, Bruce, Heisel, Marnin J., and Delavan, Rachel L.
- Subjects
ELDER care ,MENTAL depression ,PRIMARY care - Abstract
To examine the psychometric properties of the 15-item Geriatric Depression Scale (GDS-15), a brief depression screening measure. Cross-sectional. Nineteen counties in western New York, West Virginia, and Ohio. Nine hundred sixty functionally impaired, cognitively intact, community-dwelling primary care patients aged 65 and older. The GDS-15, major depression as measured using the Mini-International Neuropsychiatric Interview, depressed mood, life satisfaction, suicidal ideation, and reported suicide attempts. Exploratory factor analyses suggested a two-factor structure for the GDS-15 in this category of patients, with component subscales assessing depression and positive affect. Cronbach alpha coefficients provide evidence for moderate, although acceptable, internal consistency reliability. Significant associations between the GDS-15 and measures of depressed mood, life satisfaction, and suicidal ideation demonstrated construct validity, whereas acceptable sensitivity and specificity to discriminate between depressed and nondepressed patients demonstrated criterion validity. Internal consistency reliability and construct validity did not differ significantly between patients with low and high functional impairment. A significant weakness of the scale is its low correlation with suicide attempt status. In general, this study provides evidence of impressive psychometric properties of the GDS-15 when administered to a sample of functionally impaired, cognitively intact, community-dwelling primary care patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Is Suicide Ideation a Surrogate Endpoint for Geriatric Suicide?
- Author
-
Links, Paul S., Heisel, Marnin J., and Quastel, Adam
- Subjects
GERIATRICS ,SUICIDE ,CAUSES of death ,OFFENSES against the person ,SUICIDAL behavior ,VIOLENT deaths - Abstract
The present study explored the validity of treating suicide ideation as a surrogate endpoint that can serve as a proxy for suicide in clinical intervention research with suicidal seniors. Two criteria; that suicide ideation is modulated by the proposed intervention and that modulation of suicide ideation leads to a quantitative reduction in suicide rates, were the focus of this review. A series of literature searches of the PsychINFO and Medline databases were conducted on the terms geriatric, elderly, seniors, suicide, self-destruction, clinical, randomized, trial, treatment, intervention, and ideation. Articles were analyzed if they provided sufficient information to examine whether an intervention effectively led to a reduction in suicide ideation among seniors. Two hundred and eight articles were considered for potential inclusion in this study, with 19 articles meeting final inclusion criteria. The articles reviewed were divided into three broad categories: articles supporting suicide ideation as a surrogate endpoint for geriatric suicide (n = 6); those not supporting this hypothesis (n = 1); and those providing insufficient information to test the hypothesis (n = 12). The present analysis provided modest evidence for suicide ideation as a surrogate endpoint for geriatric suicide, due, in part, to a paucity of randomized controlled trials of treatment interventions for suicidal seniors, thus demonstrating a clear need for research in this area. Implications of utilizing surrogate endpoints in suicide research are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Purpose in Life, Satisfaction with Life, and Suicide Ideation in a Clinical Sample.
- Author
-
Heisel, Marnin J. and Flett, Gordon L.
- Subjects
LIFE ,SATISFACTION ,SUICIDE ,PSYCHOTHERAPY patients ,VIOLENT deaths ,PSYCHIATRY - Abstract
This study examined the role of purpose in life and satisfaction with life in protecting against suicide ideation in a clinical psychiatric sample. Forty-nine psychiatric patients completed self-report measures of suicide ideation, purpose in life, satisfaction with life, neuroticism, depression, and social hopelessness. Zero-order correlations indicated significant associations between suicide ideation and the various predictors, in the hypothesized directions. Regression analyses illustrated that purpose in life and satisfaction with life accounted for significant additional variability in suicide ideation scores above and beyond that accounted for by the negative psychological factors alone. Purpose in life also mediated the relation between satisfaction with life and suicide ideation and moderated the relation between depression and suicide ideation. These findings demonstrate the potential value of attending to both resilience and pathology when building predictive models of suicide ideation and of attending to key existential themes when assessing and treating suicidal individuals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Facial Expressions and Ambivalence: Looking for Conflict in All the Right Faces.
- Author
-
Heisel, Marnin J. and Mongrain, Myriam
- Subjects
NONVERBAL communication ,FACIAL expression ,SELF-expression ,EXPRESSIVE behavior ,PARALINGUISTICS ,BODY language - Abstract
The present study examined the impact of conflict over emotional expression on the nonverbal communication process between romantic partners. Fifty-four romantically involved female undergraduate students who scored within the upper or lower 30th percentile range on the Ambivalence over the Expression of Emotion Questionnaire (AEQ; King & Emmons, 1990) were recruited along with their romantic partners. The facial expressions of these women were examined during a conflict resolution task. Analyses indicated that highly ambivalent women expressed a greater number of negative facial expressions and shorter lasting positive facial expressions (measured with FACES; Kring & Sloan, 1992) than less ambivalent women. These expressions were not entirely explained by current mood, as ambivalence predicted a greater number of negative facial expressions, and a briefer display of positive facial expressions, above and beyond current levels of negative and positive affect. Furthermore, analyses indicated that the number of women's negative expressions predicted significant increases in men's dysphoria and marginal increases in men's anxiety, suggesting potential negative interactional patterns between ambivalent women and their partners. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Suicide Ideation in the Elderly.
- Author
-
Heisel, Marnin J.
- Subjects
SUICIDE ,COGNITION disorders in old age ,MENTAL depression ,PROBLEM-solving therapy ,INTERPERSONAL psychotherapy - Abstract
Focuses on a study indicating higher rates of suicide in the elderly. Factors for suicide ideation including decrease in cognitive functioning, hopelessness and impaired recognition of meaning or purpose of life; Suicide as a rational response to painful old age; Treatment of late-life depression through problem-solving therapy, Life Review and Interpersonal Psychotherapy.
- Published
- 2004
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.