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Journal Article

Citation

Mollison E, Chaplin E, Underwood L, McCarthy J. Adv. Ment. Health Intellect. Disabil. 2014; 8(5): e4.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2014, Emerald Group Publishing)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

PURPOSE - Suicide is one of the top three leading causes of death amongst those aged between 15 and 44 years; and tenth leading cause of death in the wider population. The base rates of suicide, suicide attempts and suicide related behaviours are comparably low in the general population with between 17-68% of individuals who successfully commit suicide having made a previous attempt to take their own life. As recently as the 1980's it was still a widely held belief that individuals with intellectual disability did not have the cognitive capacity to experience mental health problems and this acted as a 'buffer' against suicidal behaviour.

DESIGN/METHODOLOGY/APPROACH - The literature search covered the time period 1993-2013 and returned 117 studies, 77 of which related to individuals with intellectual disability, 37 of which related to adults. Following screening titles and abstracts 28 articles were removed. A total of nine studies were found to be eligible for inclusion in the review. A further two studies examining suicide in adolescents (up to adulthood) with ID were also considered. From the eligible studies the following information was considered: study design, sample size, strengths, limitations and the risk factors associated with an increased risk of suicide

Findings - The suicide risk factors identified during the review were found to be in keeping with the general population and included a diagnosis of clinical depression, history of self harm, unemployment, loneliness, unemployment, an increased need for support from others, early onset mental illness and being treatment resistive.

ORIGINALITY/VALUE - Suicide in individuals with intellectual disability is a topic that has not received a great deal of attention from professionals and clinicians alike. People with intellectual disability have higher rates of mental health problems and therefore it could be argued that they are more likely to be at risk. This study aims to look at risk factors specific to people with intellectual disability for clinicians to consider in their daily practice.


Language: en

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