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The focus of suicide research changes from traditional risk factors to acute warning signs. Patient self-reported suicidal ideation (SI) is not a reliable measure of acute suicide risk. Presuicidal syndromes such as suicide crisis syndrome (SCS) attempt to describe measurable syndromes based on warning signs other than SI.
Methods
Seven hundred and ten acutely admitted patients were included in the study. Identification of symptoms describing the five components of SCS was done by performing a retrospective text analysis of the patient records (electronic medical records). Patients were grouped according to high or low level of SCS symptoms. We performed statistical tests for group differences in demographics, traditional risk factors, and clinical variables, including agitation assessed by the Positive and Negative Symptom Scale-Excited Component (PANSS-EC).
Results
Seventy-two patients had high levels of SCS symptoms. They reported less SI the last month before admission; suicidality was less relevant for referral, the intake suicide assessment more often concluded with high suicide risk, they were more often referred and admitted involuntarily, and they had higher total scores on PANSS-EC.
Conclusion
The individual SCS symptoms may provide useful information in the evaluation of acute suicide risk at intake. A high level of SCS symptoms suggests more severe conditions. The lower reports among high-level than low-level SCS patients of self-reported SI last month before admission, shows the limitation of using SI as a warning sign. The association between the level of SCS symptoms and PANSS-EC total score suggests that agitation could give valuable additional information for suicide risk assessments.
Limited access to health services and overwhelmed healthcare systems created a challenging environment for those in need of mental health support during the COVID-19 pandemic, and the pandemic impacted suicide risk in several ways.
Aims
The present study aimed to analyse how the quality of the health security systems in 12 countries affected suicide crisis syndrome (SCS) during the pandemic. We hypothesised that countries with robust health systems were better able to respond to the increased demand for (mental) health support, resulting in fewer cases of SCS.
Method
From June 2020 to September 2021, 11 848 participants from 12 different countries took part in an online survey. Besides asking about sociodemographic information, the survey assessed the severity of SCS with the Suicide Crisis Inventory (SCI). The Global Health Security Index and the Legatum Prosperity Health Index were used to operationalise the quality of the national health systems. Multilevel analyses were performed to evaluate the impact of health system quality and COVID-19-associated factors on SCI scores.
Results
SCS was more prevalent among participants with COVID-19 symptoms and in countries with high rates of COVID-19-associated deaths. Multilevel analyses revealed a significant interaction effect of COVID-19 symptoms and national health indices. SCS occurred significantly less frequently in participants with COVID-19 symptoms living in countries with good health security systems.
Conclusions
The challenges posed by the pandemic highlight the necessity to promote accessible and affordable health services to mitigate the negative impact of the pandemic on suicidal ideation and behaviour.
The COVID-19 pandemic has had a globally devastating psychosocial impact. A detailed understanding of the mental health implications of this worldwide crisis is critical for successful mitigation of and preparation for future pandemics. Using a large international sample, we investigated in the present study the relationship between multiple COVID-19 parameters (both disease characteristics and government responses) and the incidence of the suicide crisis syndrome (SCS), an acute negative affect state associated with near-term suicidal behavior.
Methods:
Data were collected from 5528 adults across 10 different countries in an anonymous web-based survey between June 2020 and January 2021.
Results:
Individuals scoring above the SCS cut-off lived in countries with higher peak daily cases and deaths during the first wave of the pandemic. Additionally, the longer participants had been exposed to markers of pandemic severity (eg, lockdowns), the more likely they were to screen positive for the SCS. Findings reflected both country-to-country comparisons and individual variation within the pooled sample.
Conclusion:
Both the pandemic itself and the government interventions utilized to contain the spread appear to be associated with suicide risk. Public policy should include efforts to mitigate the mental health impact of current and future global disasters.
Personality traits have been associated with long-term suicide risk but their relationship with short-term risk is still unknown. Therefore, to address this gap, we explored the moderating effect of personality traits on the relationship between the Suicide Crisis Syndrome (SCS) and short-term suicidal behaviors (SB).
Sampling and Methods
Adult participants (N = 459) were administered the Suicide Crisis Inventory (SCI), a validated self-report questionnaire designed to measure the intensity of the Suicidal Crisis Syndrome, the Big Five Inventory for personality traits, and the Columbia Suicide Severity Rating Scale for SB at intake and at a 1-month follow-up. The PROCESS macro in SPSS was used to test the moderation model. Covariates hypothesized to influence the results were added: age, gender, ethnicity, years of education, and depressive symptomatology on the Beck Depression Inventory. This study was a secondary analysis drawn from a larger study on the SCS.
Results
SCI total score had a significant positive relationship with SB at the 1-month follow-up for patients with lower levels of extraversion, agreeableness, conscientiousness, and openness, respectively. Hence, these four traits were protective against SB. There was an association between SCI and SB for patients with high levels of neuroticism at the 1-month follow-up.
Conclusions
High levels of neuroticism served as a risk factor, whereas high levels of the other Big Five traits were protective factors against short-term SB in the context of elevated SCS symptoms. Thus, personality traits play a role in moderating the relationship between the SCS and imminent SB.
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