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Journal Article

Citation

Artieda-Urrutia P, Delgado-Gomez D, Ruiz-Hernandez D, Garcia-Vega JM, Berenguer-Elias N, Oquendo MA, Blasco-Fontecilla H. Rev. Psiquiatr. Salud Ment. 2015; 8(4): 199-206.

Affiliation

Department of Psychiatry, IDIPHIM, Puerta de Hierro University Hospital, Majadahonda, Spain; Autonoma University, CIBERSAM, Madrid, Spain. Electronic address: hmblasco@yahoo.es.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2015, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.rpsm.2015.02.004

PMID

26024576

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To develop a brief and reliable psychometric scale to identify individuals at risk for suicidal behaviour.

METHOD: Design: case-control study; sample and setting: 182 individuals (61 suicide attempters, 57 psychiatric controls, and 64 psychiatrically healthy controls) aged 18 or older, admitted to the emergency department at Puerta de Hierro University Hospital in Madrid, Spain; measures: all participants completed a form including their socio-demographic, clinical characteristics, and the Personality and Life Events (PLE) scale (27 items). To assess Axis I diagnoses, all psychiatric patients (including suicide attempters) were administered the Mini International Neuropsychiatric Interview (MINI); statistical analyses: descriptive statistics were computed for the socio-demographic factors. Additionally, chi-square independence tests were applied to evaluate differences in socio-demographic and clinical variables, and the PLE scale between groups. A stepwise linear regression with backward variable selection was conducted to build the Short Personality Life Event (S-PLE) scale. In order to evaluate the accuracy, a ROC analysis was conducted. The internal reliability was assessed using Cronbach's α, and the external reliability was evaluated using a test-retest procedure.

RESULTS: The S-PLE scale, composed of just six items, showed good performance in discriminating between medical controls, psychiatric controls and suicide attempters in an independent sample. For instance, the S-PLE scale discriminated between past suicide and past non-suicide attempters with sensitivity of 80% and specificity of 75%. The area under the ROC curve was 88%. A factor analysis extracted only one factor, revealing a single dimension of the S-PLE scale. Furthermore, the S-PLE scale provides values of internal and external reliability between poor (test-retest: 0.55) and acceptable (Cronbach's α: 0.65) ranges. Administration time is about 1min.

CONCLUSIONS: The S-PLE scale is a useful and accurate instrument for estimating the risk of suicidal behaviour in settings where the time is scarce.


Language: es

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