Suicide: The Risk is Lifelong
For Those Who've Tried It Once
People who have
attempted suicide once remain at risk
of another try for the rest of their life, a comprehensive new British study
indicates.
The study, which covered 23 years, has
implications for relatives and friends as well as psychotherapists of those who
have tried to take their own lives.
"Basically, we are talking about the rest
of their lives," says lead author Dr. Gary R. Jenkins, a consulting
psychiatrist at East Ham Memorial Hospital in London. The report appears in the
new issue of the British Medical Journal.
Jenkins and his colleagues studied the records
of 140 people who attempted suicide between May 1977 and March 1980, looking
specifically at the cause of death for the 25 who had died by July 2000.
"Examination of death certificates
revealed three suicides and nine probable suicides (four were recorded as open
verdict and five as accidental death)," they report.
Using these findings as a guideline, the
researchers extrapolated the risk of additional suicide attempts for the next
23 years.
Their conclusion: the suicide rate for those
who had attempted it once was 5.9 attempts per 1,000 people per year for the
five years after the first try; 5.0 attempts per 1,000 people per year 15 to 20
years after the first try; and 6.8 attempts per 1,000 people for the final
three years.
"The rate did not decline with time,"
the researchers report.
The overall
suicide rate for the general
population is about two attempts per 1,000 people per year.
"This confirms something we know about
suicide, that the best predictor is a previous attempt," Jenkins says.
"But there haven't been any studies of this length. This paper proves what
we have thought clinically -- a previous attempt is a predictive factor even if
it is more than two decades after the first act."
The findings demonstrate that "if a
patient shows up in an emergency room and has made a suicidal attempt, the
clinician needs to be aware that the risk of doing so again is very high, and
the patient should not be let go without a psychiatric assessment or
follow-up," Jenkins says.
John L. McIntosh, professor of psychiatry at
Indiana University and a past president of the American Association of
Suicidology, says the study also indicates that "people in this person's
life should react and respond more quickly when there are
difficulties."
"Friends and particularly family members will want to seek
help for this person and make sure he or she gets to a mental health
professional quickly," McIntosh says.
The British study is valuable because "it
reinforces long-standing results from other studies that are not nearly as
lengthy as this one," McIntosh says. "We didn't know that this risk
continued with them this long. We are basically talking about the rest of their
lives."
"Many would assume that the heightened
risk will be gone after two or three years. This suggests that is not
accurate," he adds.
Source: Healthscout News, Nov. 14,
2002
The National Hopeline Network 1-800-SUICIDE
provides access to trained telephone counselors, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.
Or for a crisis
center in your area, go here.
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