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Journal Article

Citation

Pien FC, Chang YC, Feng HP, Hung PW, Huang SY, Tzeng WC. West. J. Nurs. Res. 2015; 38(6): 721-737.

Affiliation

National Defense Medical Center, Taipei City, Taiwan (R.O.C.) wctzeng@mail.ndmctsgh.edu.tw.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2015, SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/0193945915620306

PMID

26681669

Abstract

The aim of this follow-up study was to examine factors related to a suicide attempt within 3 months of a prior attempt. Participants were recruited from a suicide-prevention center. Of 96 suicidal individuals who had participated in the baseline study, only 51 completed all measures at follow-up assessment. Study results showed that suicidal individuals who reattempted suicide during the first 3 months of follow-up care exhibited lower mean scores on all four domains of the brief version of the World Health Organization Quality-of-Life Instrument at follow-up assessment than at baseline. In contrast, individuals who did not reattempt suicide had higher quality-of-life scores across all domains between baseline and 3 months. The reattempt and no-reattempt groups differed significantly in the physical health and environmental domains. These results can be used by nurses to develop their abilities to recognize and prevent suicide reattempts in high-risk groups.


Language: en

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