Ribeiro Jessica D, Yen Shirley, Joiner Thomas, Siegler Ilene C
Department of Psychology, Harvard University, 33 Kirkland St., Cambridge, MA 02138, USA.
Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior, Brown University, USA.
J Affect Disord. 2015 Dec 1;188:53-9. doi: 10.1016/j.jad.2015.07.037. Epub 2015 Aug 22.
States of heightened arousal (e.g., agitation, sleep disturbance) have been repeatedly linked to suicidal thoughts and behaviors, including attempts and death. Studies have further indicated that these states may be particularly pernicious among individuals who evidence high suicidal capability. The objective of this study was to examine the interactive effects of heightened arousal and the capability for suicide in the prospective prediction of death by suicide. We examine this relation beyond the effects of robust predictors of suicide, namely depression and hopelessness.
Participants were drawn from a larger study of undergraduates who completed baseline assessments during their freshman year and were then followed to time of death. The sample in this study only included individuals who had died by suicide (n=96) or other causes (n=542). Proxy measures to assess predictor variables were constructed using items from the MMPI, which was administered at baseline. An independent sample of clinical outpatients (n=was used to evaluate the construct validity of the proxy measures).
Results were in line with expectation: heightened arousal interacted with capability for suicide to prospectively predict death by suicide, such that, as severity of heightened arousal symptoms increased, the likelihood of death by suicide increased among individuals high but not low on capability for suicide.
Limitations include the use of proxy measures, the extended length of follow-up, and the homogeneity of the sample (i.e., primarily White males).
These findings add to an emerging literature that supports the moderating influence of capability for suicide on the relationship between states of heightened arousal on the likelihood of death by suicide.
高度唤醒状态(如激动、睡眠障碍)一直与自杀念头和行为反复相关,包括自杀未遂和死亡。研究进一步表明,这些状态在具有高自杀能力的个体中可能尤其有害。本研究的目的是检验高度唤醒与自杀能力在自杀死亡前瞻性预测中的交互作用。我们在考虑自杀的有力预测因素即抑郁和绝望的影响之外,研究这种关系。
参与者来自一项对本科生的更大规模研究,他们在大学一年级时完成了基线评估,随后被跟踪至死亡时间。本研究中的样本仅包括自杀死亡者(n = 96)或因其他原因死亡者(n = 542)。使用在基线时进行的明尼苏达多相人格调查表(MMPI)中的项目构建评估预测变量的替代指标。一个独立的临床门诊患者样本(n = 用于评估替代指标的结构效度)。
结果符合预期:高度唤醒与自杀能力相互作用,前瞻性地预测自杀死亡,即随着高度唤醒症状严重程度的增加,自杀能力高而非低的个体自杀死亡的可能性增加。
局限性包括使用替代指标、随访时间延长以及样本的同质性(即主要是白人男性)。
这些发现为新兴文献增添了内容,支持自杀能力对高度唤醒状态与自杀死亡可能性之间关系的调节作用。