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Journal Article

Citation

Leon-Carrion J, De Serdio-Arias ML, Cabezas FM, Roldán JM, Domínguez-Morales R, Martin JM, Sanchez MA. Brain Inj. 2001; 15(2): 175-181.

Affiliation

Department of Experimental Psychology, University of Seville, Spain. jleon@cica.es

Copyright

(Copyright © 2001, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1080/026990501458407

PMID

11260767

Abstract

The possibility that patients who have suffered a traumatic brain injury will commit suicide is high, and in many cases clinicians tend to underestimate this possibility. In this study, 39 consecutive patients are studied through a Rorschach technique more than 1.5 years after their hospital discharge. The data show that 48.6% of the patients fulfil the criteria that classifies them as depressive, and, of these, 65% are at clinical risk to commit suicide (33.3% of the total of TBI patients); 25.6% have not met the criteria of depression or suicidal tendencies, and another 25.6% show very low suicide tendency scores. Only 15.6% of the total patients presented only depression without risk of suicide. The neurobehavioural and cognitive profile of the TBI suicide-prone patient shows an emotional person with cognitive difficulties in how they interpret reality, the person tries to understand what is happening around them, but is unable to cope. They show concrete thoughts, although they have difficulties solving problems and have few intellectual resources to cope with their surroundings. They do not know how to distance themselves from the emotional aspects of situations.


Language: en

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