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Suicide

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Suicide Suicidal behavior / parasuicide Self injury Risky behavior Self-Injurious Behavior Self-injury (also known as self-harm, self-mutilation, self-abuse and self ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Suicide


1
Suicide
Suicidal behavior / parasuicide
Self injury
Risky behavior
2
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3
Self-Injurious Behavior
  • Self-injury (also known as self-harm,
    self-mutilation, self-abuse and self-inflicted
    violence) is a compulsion or impulse to inflict
    physical wounds on one's own body, motivated by
    a need to cope with unbearable psychological
    distress or regain a sense of emotional balance.
    The act is usually carried out without suicidal,
    sexual or decorative intent. 
  • (Sutton Others, 2000)
  •  

4
SIB Spectrum
  • Supefcial injuries
  • Cutting, hair pulling
  • Self burning, severe
    head banging

  • Autoenoculation, autocasration,
    autosurgery

mild
severe
Severe gender identity disorders Dissociative
disorders Psychotic states
Mental rtardation Autism Congenital syndroms
Personality disorders Eating disorders Interperson
al context
5
Epidemiology of SIB
  • Prevalence
  • 1600 general population,
  • 400-1400100,000
  • 40.5 of laxative-abusing bulimics
  • 14 of mentally retarded
  • Gender differences uncertain, appears to be more
    prevalent in women.

6
Neurobiology of SIB
  • Animal models
  • Dopamin activation L-DOPA induces SIB via
    activation 0f D1 receptor. Selective D1
    antagonists reduce autoagression
  • Opioids activation sufentanil induced
    autoagression.
  • Serotonin depletion p-chlorophenilalanine
    increases agression and autoagressin

7
Neurobiology of SIB
  • Human studies
  • Lesch-Nyhan Syndrom decreased level of dopamine
    and thyrosine hysroxolase in atopsied brains.
  • Cornelia-De-Lange Syndrom Depressed Blood
    serotonin.
  • Suicide attempters decreased CSF 5-HIAA, reduced
    prolactin response to fenfluramine.
  • Opioid dysregulation increased plasma enkephalin
    in SIB patients, incread CSF endorphins in SIB
    autistics.

8
Different Meanings of SIB
  • Expression of intense emotions.
  • Impulse, self regulation, self control.
  • Distraction from psychic pain.
  • Self (or others) punishment, atornmement.
  • Feeling , excitement.
  • Reenactment of trauma.
  • A cry for help.
  • Psycholgical or secondary gains.

9
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10
Regulation ()
altriosm
fatalism
Integration (-)
Integration ()
egiosm
anomia
Regulation (-)
11
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12
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13
Facing the facts
  • Suicide is considered to be the second leading
    cause of death among college students.
  • Suicide is the second leading cause of death for
    people aged 24-34.
  • Suicide is the third leading cause of death for
    people aged 10-24.
  • Suicide is the fourth leading cause of death for
    adults between the ages of 18 and 65.
  • Suicide is highest in white males over 85.
  • (48.42/100,000, 2004)

14
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15
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16
Risk factors
17
Protective factors
  • Children in the home, (except postpartum
    psychosis)
  • Pregnancy
  • Deterrent religious beliefs
  • Life satisfaction
  • Reality testing ability
  • Positive coping skills
  • Positive social support
  • Positive therapeutic relationship

18
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19
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20
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21
High Risk Strategies
While 90 of suicide are considered to be due to
mental disorders, about half have never been in
contact with MH services1 Suicide risk is
extremely high immediately after discharge from a
psychiatric hospital, and for the first year
after deliberate self harm. In these groups, it
takes 385 / 500 cases to treat in order to
prevent one suicide. Major changes in suicide
rates are most likely to result from population
strategies rather then high-risk
strategies Effective interventions for
deliberate self - harm patients are probably the
best high-risk strategies
1 Vassilas Morgan, BMJ 1993 2 Lewis, Hawton
Jones, BJPsy 1997
22
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23
Disorders Correlated With Suicidal Behavior
Developed by the Suicide Risk Advisory Committee
of the Risk Management Foundation of the Harvard
Medical Institutions in 1996.
  • Mood Disorders (15 percent lifetime risk of
    suicide)
  • The absence of psychosis does not imply safety.
  • A misleading reduction of anxious or depressed
    affect can occur in some patients who have
    resolved their ambivalence by deciding to commit
    suicide.
  • The likelihood of suicide within 1 year is
    increased when the patient exhibits Panic
    attacks, Psychic anxiety, Anhedonia, Alcohol
    abuse .
  • The likelihood of suicide during the ensuing 1-5
    years is increased when the patient exhibits
    Increased hopelessness, Suicidal ideation,
    History of suicide attempts.

24
Disorders Correlated With Suicidal Behavior
  • Panic Disorder (7-15 percent lifetime risk of
    suicide)
  • Suicide rate may be similar to that of mood
    disorders
  • Greater likelihood is correlated with more severe
    illness or comorbidity
  • Suicide does not necessarily occur during a panic
    attack
  • Demoralization or significant loss increase the
    likelihood of suicide
  • Agitation may increase the likelihood of
    translating impulses into action

25
Disorders Correlated With Suicidal Behavior
  • Schizophrenia (10 percent lifetime risk of
    suicide)
  • Suicide is relatively uncommon during psychotic
    episodes
  • The relationship between command hallucinations
    and actual suicide is not clearly causal
  • Suicidal ideation occurs in 60-80 percent of
    patients
  • Suicide attempts occur in 30-55 percent of
    patients
  • Suicide potential is increased by
  • Good premorbid functioning
  • Early phase of illness
  • Hopelessness or depression
  • Recognition of deterioration, e.g., during a
    post-psychotic depressed phase

26
Disorders Correlated With Suicidal Behavior
  • Alcoholism (3 percent lifetime risk of suicide)
  • Abusers of alcohol/drugs comprise 15-25 percent
    of suicides
  • Alcohol is associated with nearly 50 percent of
    all suicides
  • Increased suicide potential in an alcoholic
    patient correlates with
  • Active substance abuse
  • Adolescence
  • Second or third decades of illness
  • Comorbid psychiatric illness
  • Recent or anticipated interpersonal loss
  • Substance abuse can represent self treatment to
    blunt the anxiety or mood disturbance associated
    with a masked, comorbid psychiatric disorder

27
Disorders Correlated With Suicidal Behavior
  • Borderline Personality Disorder (7 lifetime
    risk of suicide)
  • Much higher risk associated with comorbidity,
    especially with mood disorder and substance abuse
  • Psychopathology associated with increased risk
  • Impulsivity, hopelessness/despair
  • Antisocial features (with dishonesty)
  • Interpersonal aloofness ("malignant narcissism")
  • Self-mutilating tendencies
  • Psychosis with bizarre suicide attempts
  • Psychopathology associated with diminished risk
  • Infantile personality (with hysterical features)
  • Masochistic personality

28
The Neurobiology of suicide risk
  • Suicidal behavior has neurobiological
    determinants independent of the psychiatric
    illness with which it is associated.
  • Vulnerability to act on suicide impulses results
    from the interaction between triggers or
    precipitants and the threshold for suicidal
    behavior
  • Studies found decreased serotonin activity in the
    prefrontal cerebral cortex of suicide victims.

J.J. Mann, 1999
29
Familial Transmission of Suicidality
  • Risk factor for suicide is transmitted in
    families independently of transmission of major
    depression or psychosis, but not independently of
    impulsive aggression.

Brent DA et al, Arch J Psych 19961145-1152
30
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31
Areas to Evaluate in Suicide Assessment
Adapted from APA guidelines, part A, p. 4
32

The Detection of Suicidality
  • The assessment of suicidality is an active
    process during which clinicians evaluate
  • Suicidal intent and lethality
  • Dynamic meanings and motivation for suicide
  • Presence of a suicidal plan
  • Presence of overt suicidal/self-destructive
    behavior
  • The patient's physiological, cognitive, and
    affective states
  • The patient's coping potential
  • The patient's epidemiological risk factors

33
The Detection of Suicidality
  • Suicide-specific questions
  • Are suicidal thoughts/feelings present?
  • What form does the patient's wish for suicide
    take?
  • What does suicide mean to the patient?
  • Has the patient lost or anticipates losing an
    essential sustaining relationship?
  • Has the patient lost or anticipates losing
    his/her main reason for living?
  • How far has the suicide planning process
    proceeded?
  • Have suicidal behaviors occurred in the past?
  • Has the patient engaged in self-mutilating
    behaviors?
  • Does the patient's mental state increase the
    potential for suicide?

34
The Detection of Suicidality (cont.)
  • Are depression and/or despair present?
  • Does the patient's physiologic state increase the
    potential for suicide?
  • Is the patient vulnerable to painful affects such
    as aloneness, self-contempt, murderous rage,
    shame, or panic?
  • Are there recent stresses in the patient's life?
  • What are the patient's capacities for
    self-regulation?
  • Is the patient able/competent to participate in
    treatment?
  • Loss of coping mechanism? 
  • Are epidemiological risk factors present? 

35
Treatment Planning
  • Treatment planning takes into account
  • The patient's potential for suicide,
  • Capacity to form a treatment alliance,
  • Range of available treatment alternatives from
    outpatient follow-up to hospitalization with
    constant observation.

36
Treatment Planning (cont.)
  • Collect Data Before Treatment Planning
  • Identify a Range of Treatment Alternatives Weigh
    the risks and benefits of each alternative,
    including the alternative "no treatment."
  • Involve the Patient and Family in the Treatment
    Planning Process to the Degree Possible
  • Consider pharmacotherapy.

37
Treatment Planning (cont.)
  • Contracts Will Not Guarantee the Patient's Safety
  • contracts can give staff a false sense of
    security and interfere with a thorough suicide
    assessment.
  • Choose Appropriate Levels of Observation,
    Supervision, and Privileges.
  • The treatment team may decide to tolerate short
    term risk to foster long-term growth.
  • Documentation should make clear the choices and
    rationale.
  • Assess the risk of continued hospitalization
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