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Journal Article

Citation

Kovacs M, George CJ. J. Affect. Disord. 2019; ePub(ePub): ePub.

Affiliation

University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, Pittsburgh PA, United States.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.jad.2019.11.091

PMID

31787418

Abstract

BACKGROUND: As the rates of suicidal behaviors continue to rise, research is needed that can facilitate prevention. The present study therefore examined whether a modifiable process, dysfunctional regulation of sadness (maladaptive mood repair), predicts a range of suicidal behaviors and if its impact is affected by risk and protective factors.

METHODS: Young adults with histories of childhood-onset mood disorder (COMD) (n = 173) or no histories of major psychiatric illness (controls, n = 96) were followed for approximately 3 years. Self-rated questionnaires and psychiatric evaluations were administered at study entry (T1) and across the follow-up (T2) and clinicians assessed the DSM-range of non-fatal suicidal behaviors. We hypothesized that the impact of depression on suicidal behaviors was mediated by dysfunctional regulation of sadness.

RESULTS: At T1, 90% of the COMD group had histories of various suicidal behaviors; 63% had past suicide attempts. During follow-up, 40% exhibited suicidal behaviors; 7% reported suicide attempts. Controlling for prior suicidal behaviors, T1 maladaptive mood repair predicted suicidal behavior during the follow-up and differentiated recurrent thoughts of death from other forms of suicidality. Protective and risk factors lost their predictive power in the presence of maladaptive mood repair. LIMITATIONS: Few control cases exhibited suicidal behavior during the follow-up and the high inter-correlations among several key variables constrained the models that could be fitted.

CONCLUSIONS: Programs to prevent suicidal behavior among high-risk individuals should include maladaptive mood repair as an intervention target. Further research is needed on whether recurrent thoughts of death constitute a valid index of suicidality.

Copyright © 2019. Published by Elsevier B.V.


Language: en

Keywords

Depression; Emotion regulation; Mood repair; Risk prediction; Suicidal behavior

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