Beautrais A L, Joyce P R, Mulder R T
Department of Psychological Medicine, Christchurch School of Medicine, New Zealand.
Addiction. 1999 Aug;94(8):1155-64. doi: 10.1046/j.1360-0443.1999.94811555.x.
To compare the relationship between cannabis abuse/dependence and risk of medically serious suicide attempts in individuals making serious suicide attempts and randomly selected comparison subjects.
Case-control comparison.
Cases, a general hospital; controls, the local community.
Cases were 302 consecutive individuals making medically serious suicide attempts; 1028 randomly selected control subjects.
DSM-III-R mental disorder diagnoses; measures of socio-demographic characteristics and childhood and family experiences.
Of those making serious suicide attempts, 16.2% met DSM-III-R criteria for cannabis abuse/dependence at the time of the attempt, compared with 1.9% of comparison subjects (OR = 10.3; 95%CI, 5.95-17.8, p < 0.0001). Risks of serious suicide attempt were significantly related to a series of socio-demographic and childhood characteristics, and to mental disorders that were co-morbid with cannabis abuse/dependence. When the association between cannabis abuse/dependence and suicide attempt risk was controlled for socio-demographic factors, childhood factors and concurrent psychiatric morbidity, there was a marginally significant association (OR = 2.0; 95%CI, 0.97-5.3, p < 0.06) between cannabis abuse/dependence and serious suicide attempt risk.
These results suggested that much of the association between cannabis abuse/dependence and suicide attempt risk arose because: (a) individuals who develop cannabis abuse/dependency tend to come from disadvantaged socio-demographic and childhood backgrounds which, independently of cannabis abuse, are associated with higher risk of suicide attempt, or (b) because cannabis abuse/dependence is co-morbid with other mental disorders which are independently associated with suicidal behaviour. Nevertheless, the possibility remains that cannabis abuse/dependence may make an independent contribution to risk of serious suicide attempt, both directly and through the possible effects of cannabis abuse on risk of other mental disorders.
比较大麻滥用/依赖与严重自杀未遂者以及随机选取的对照对象中具有医学意义的严重自杀未遂风险之间的关系。
病例对照比较。
病例来自一家综合医院;对照来自当地社区。
病例为302名连续的具有医学意义的严重自杀未遂者;1028名随机选取的对照对象。
DSM-III-R精神障碍诊断;社会人口学特征以及童年和家庭经历的测量指标。
在严重自杀未遂者中,16.2%在未遂时符合DSM-III-R大麻滥用/依赖标准,而对照对象中这一比例为1.9%(比值比=10.3;95%置信区间,5.95-17.8,p<0.0001)。严重自杀未遂风险与一系列社会人口学和童年特征以及与大麻滥用/依赖共病的精神障碍显著相关。当对社会人口学因素、童年因素和并发的精神疾病进行控制后,大麻滥用/依赖与严重自杀未遂风险之间仍存在微弱的显著关联(比值比=2.0;95%置信区间,0.97-5.3,p<0.06)。
这些结果表明,大麻滥用/依赖与自杀未遂风险之间的关联很大程度上是由于:(a)发展为大麻滥用/依赖的个体往往来自社会人口学和童年背景不利的群体,这些背景独立于大麻滥用,与更高的自杀未遂风险相关;或者(b)因为大麻滥用/依赖与其他独立于自杀行为的精神障碍共病。然而,大麻滥用/依赖仍有可能直接或通过大麻滥用对其他精神障碍风险的可能影响,对严重自杀未遂风险做出独立贡献。