1. Symptoms of the suicide crisis syndrome and therapist emotional responses: associations to self-harm and death by suicide within 18-months post-discharge among patients at an acute psychiatric department.
- Author
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Høyen, Karina Sagmo, Prestmo, Astrid, Simpson, Melanie R., Cohen, Lisa Janet, Solem, Stian, Medås, Kamilla, Hjemdal, Odin, Vaaler, Arne Einar, and Torgersen, Terje
- Subjects
SUICIDE risk factors ,PSYCHOTHERAPISTS ,PSYCHOTHERAPY patients ,SELF-injurious behavior ,RISK assessment ,SUICIDAL ideation ,RESEARCH funding ,T-test (Statistics) ,RECEIVER operating characteristic curves ,PSYCHOTHERAPIST attitudes ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,SEX distribution ,PROBABILITY theory ,EMOTIONS ,DISCHARGE planning ,MANN Whitney U Test ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,SUICIDE ,PSYCHIATRIC hospitals ,DATA analysis software ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors - Abstract
Background and aims: This study explored the associations between symptoms of the Suicide Crisis Syndrome (SCS) at admission and self-harm and death by suicide post-discharge. The association between clinicians' emotional responses toward inpatients at admission and post-discharge self-harm and suicide death was also explored. Methods: Within the first 24-h of admission, patients completed a self-report measure of symptoms of SCS, and clinicians reported their emotional responses toward the patients. Follow-up data were obtained from the Norwegian Patient Registry and the Norwegian Cause of Death Registry. Results: Within 18 months post-discharge, 44 (12.7%) out of 347 patients had self-harmed, and five patients (1.4%) had died by suicide. At admission, patients who later self-harmed reported higher symptoms of SCS compared to the other patients. Clinicians reported more negative emotional responses toward the self-harm group. In a regression analysis, previous suicidal behavior and a diagnosis of "emotionally unstable personality disorder" (EUPD; F60.3) were associated with increased risk of self-harm post-discharge. Conclusion: The results indicated that patients with post-discharge episodes of self-harm are significantly different from patients who do not self-harm in terms of more intense symptoms of SCS during admission. Clinicians' negative emotional responses may be relevant in the assessment of the risk of post-discharge self-harm. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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