1. Prospective association of attachment style with suicide attempts among US Army soldiers.
- Author
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Naifeh, James A., Ursano, Robert J., Stein, Murray B., Wang, Jing, Mash, Holly B. Herberman, Aliaga, Pablo A., Fullerton, Carol S., Dinh, Hieu M., Kao, Tzu-Cheg, Sampson, Nancy A., and Kessler, Ronald C.
- Subjects
SUICIDE risk factors ,RISK assessment ,MENTAL health ,RESEARCH funding ,ATTACHMENT behavior ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,PSYCHOLOGY of military personnel ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,CHI-squared test ,ODDS ratio ,LONGITUDINAL method ,STATISTICS ,DATA analysis software ,CONFIDENCE intervals - Abstract
Background: Insecure attachment styles are associated with retrospectively reported suicide attempts (SAs). It is not known if attachment styles are prospectively associated with medically documented SAs. Methods: A representative sample of US Army soldiers entering service (n = 21 772) was surveyed and followed via administrative records for their first 48 months of service. Attachment style (secure, preoccupied, fearful, dismissing) was assessed at baseline. Administrative medical records identified SAs. Discrete-time survival analysis examined associations of attachment style with future SA during service, adjusting for time in service, socio-demographics, service-related variables, and mental health diagnosis (MH-Dx). We examined whether associations of attachment style with SA differed based on sex and MH-Dx. Results: In total, 253 respondents attempted suicide. Endorsed attachment styles included secure (46.8%), preoccupied (9.1%), fearful (15.7%), and dismissing (19.2%). Examined separately, insecure attachment styles were associated with increased odds of SA: preoccupied [OR 2.5 (95% CI 1.7–3.4)], fearful [OR 1.6 (95% CI 1.1–2.3)], dismissing [OR 1.8 (95% CI 1.3–2.6)]. Examining attachment styles simultaneously along with other covariates, preoccupied [OR 1.9 (95% CI 1.4–2.7)] and dismissing [OR 1.7 (95% CI 1.2–2.4)] remained significant. The dismissing attachment and MH-Dx interaction was significant. In stratified analyses, dismissing attachment was associated with SA only among soldiers without MH-Dx. Other interactions were non-significant. Soldiers endorsing any insecure attachment style had elevated SA risk across the first 48 months in service, particularly during the first 12 months. Conclusions: Insecure attachment styles, particularly preoccupied and dismissing, are associated with increased future SA risk among soldiers. Elevated risk is most substantial during first year of service but persists through the first 48 months. Dismissing attachment may indicate risk specifically among soldiers not identified by the mental healthcare system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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