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Journal Article

Citation

Bryan CJ, Hitschfeld MJ, Palmer BA, Schak KM, Roberge EM, Lineberry TW. Gen. Hosp. Psychiatry 2014; 36(6): 726-731.

Affiliation

Mayo Clinic, Department of Psychiatry and Psychology, 200 First Street Southwest, Rochester, MN 55905, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2014, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.genhosppsych.2014.09.013

PMID

25312276

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To determine if the relationship of agitation with suicide ideation and suicide attempts differed between men and women.

METHOD: Self-reported severity of agitation and other suicide risk factors was obtained from 7698 consecutive patients during admission for inpatient psychiatric treatment during a 5-year period.

RESULTS: Agitation was highest among men with a history of suicide attempts. Agitation was significantly associated with frequency of suicide ideation and history of suicide attempt, but the gender-by-suicide interaction was only significant as a predictor of suicide attempt history. For men, agitation was associated with significantly increased risk for suicide attempt, but for women, agitation was not associated with risk for suicide attempt history.

RESULTS were unchanged when analyses were repeated among the subgroup of patients with suicide ideation.

CONCLUSIONS: Agitation is associated with history of suicide attempt among male but not female psychiatric inpatients. Agitation differentiates between those men who have only thought about suicide and those who have made suicide attempts.


Language: en

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