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Journal Article

Citation

Posporelis S, Paspali A, Takayanagi Y, Sawa A, Banerjea P, Kyriakopoulos M. J. Ment. Health 2015; 24(4): 225-229.

Affiliation

Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine , Baltimore, MD , USA .

Copyright

(Copyright © 2015, Informa Healthcare)

DOI

10.3109/09638237.2015.1022249

PMID

26203534

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Adolescents comprise a unique and often challenging group of patients with diverse presentations to the Mental Health Services; suicidal behavior being one of them. AIMS: The main aim of this naturalistic project was to investigate demographic and clinical correlates of adolescent suicidal and self-harm events, which may be of value to decision-making in clinical practice.

METHOD: All adolescents (nā€‰=ā€‰149) registered and actively managed by a specialist community mental health service in South London were included in the study. Clinical information from their files was used to determine suicidality/self-harm events. The Columbia Classification Algorithm of Suicide Assessment (C-CASA) was utilised for classification purposes. Logistic regression was used to explore the effects of age, sex, diagnosis, medication, substance use (alcohol and/or cannabis) and ethnicity on suicidality/self-harming behaviors.

RESULTS: Age, sex and use of psychotropic medication were identified to play a significant role in determining the risk of engaging in self-harming behavior. The risk was higher with increasing age and female sex. Medication seemed to have a protective effect. Reporting a 20% prevalence of non-suicidal self-injury (NSSI) in our population, we highlight the importance of NSSI as a distinct diagnostic category.

CONCLUSIONS: Our findings have implications for risk assessment and appropriate decision-making in clinical settings.

RESULTS are translatable and relevant to other metropolitan areas.


Language: en

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