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Journal Article

Citation

Serra G, Koukopoulos A, De Chiara L, Napoletano F, Koukopoulos A, Sani G, Faedda GL, Girardi P, Reginaldi D, Baldessarini RJ. Arch. Suicide Res. 2016; 21(3): 502-518.

Affiliation

d International Consortium for Mood & Psychotic Disorders Research , Mailman Research Center, McLean Hospital , Belmont , MA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2016, International Academy of Suicide Research, Publisher Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1080/13811118.2016.1227004

PMID

27673411

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To identify the predictive value of juvenile factors for adult suicidal behavior.

METHODS: We reviewed clinical records to compare factors identified in childhood and adolescence between adult suicidal versus nonsuicidal major affective disorder subjects.

RESULTS: Suicide attempts occurred in 23.1% of subjects. Age-at-1st-symptom was 14.2 vs 20.2 years among suicidal versus nonsuicidal subjects (p < 0.0001). More prevalent in suicidal versus non-suicidal subjects by multivariate analysis were: depressive symptoms, hyper-emotionality, younger-at-1st-affective-episode, family suicide history, childhood mood-swings, and adolescence low self-esteem. Presence of one factor yielded a Bayesian sensitivity of 64%, specificity of 50%, and negative predictive power of 86%. COMMENT: Several juvenile factors were associated with adult suicidal behavior; their absence was strongly associated with a lack of adult suicidal behavior.


Language: en

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