
@article{ref1,
title="Associations between attempted suicide, violent life events, depression, resilience and suicide by early adulthood",
journal="European psychiatry",
year="2010",
author="Nrugham, L. and Holen, A. and Sund, A.m.",
volume="25",
number="Suppl 1",
pages="435-435",
abstract="Objectives Were violent/non-violent traumatic life events and victimization by/witnessing violence associates of attempted suicide among depressed adolescents who were also less resilient at early adulthood?Method The present study examined a subset of mainly depressed, age-and-gender matched, adolescents derived from a representative sample of 2464 students (T1, mean age = 13.7 years) followed-up after one year (T2Q) and reassessed 5 years later (T3, n = 252, mean age = 20.0 years, 73% participation), with a questionnaire, including the Connor-Davidson Resilience Scale and K-SADS-PL psychiatric interviews which also tapped traumatic life events.Results & Conclusion Logistic regression analyses revealed that attempters were victims, not witnesses of violence; more depressed and less resilient than non-attempters, and that resilience was a moderator of lifetime violent events and attempted suicide, even in the presence of antecedent depression.<p />",
language="",
issn="0924-9338",
doi="10.1016/S0924-9338(10)70430-2",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0924-9338(10)70430-2"
}