Blain Rachel C, Pukay-Martin Nicole D, Martin Colleen E, Dutton-Cox Courtney E, Chard Kathleen M
Cincinnati VA Medical Center, Trauma Recovery Center, Cincinnati, Ohio, USA.
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Neuroscience, University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Cincinnati, Ohio, USA.
J Trauma Stress. 2021 Dec;34(6):1199-1208. doi: 10.1002/jts.22618. Epub 2020 Oct 31.
The interpersonal theory of suicide (Joiner, 2005) may help explain high suicide rates among veterans with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). It suggests that suicidal ideation results from believing that one is a burden on others (i.e., perceived burdensomeness) and does not belong among family, friends, or other social groups (i.e., thwarted belongingness). Evidence-based PTSD treatments, including cognitive processing therapy (CPT), decrease suicidal ideation, potentially through changes in these two theory constructs. The current study examined whether (a) changes in PTSD severity and suicidal ideation and (b) changes in negative cognitions about self and suicidal ideation were indirectly associated through changes in perceived burdensomeness and thwarted belongingness across PTSD treatment. Participants (N = 107) were veterans in a residential treatment program who were diagnosed with full or subthreshold PTSD and received CPT. Changes in PTSD symptom severity and negative cognitions about self predicted changes in suicidal ideation, B = 0.18, p < .001 and B = 0.50, p < .001, respectively. Changes in PTSD symptom severity and negative cognitions about self were indirectly associated with suicidal ideation through changes in perceived burdensomeness, B = 0.16, 95% CI [0.07, 0.25]; B = 0.27, 95% CI [0.05, 0.50], but not thwarted belongingness, B = -0.002; 95% CI [-0.06, 0.06]; B = 0.06, 95% CI [-0.12, 0.21] in separate models. These findings suggest that residential CPT may be uniquely equipped to decrease suicidality by restructuring negative beliefs, including perceptions of being a burden on others, and/or by alleviating the objective burden of PTSD.
自杀人际理论(乔伊纳,2005年)或许有助于解释创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)退伍军人的高自杀率。该理论表明,自杀念头源于认为自己是他人的负担(即感知到的负担感)以及不属于家庭、朋友或其他社会群体(即归属感受挫)。基于证据的PTSD治疗方法,包括认知加工疗法(CPT),可能通过改变这两个理论结构来降低自杀念头。本研究考察了:(a)PTSD严重程度和自杀念头的变化,以及(b)关于自我和自杀念头的负面认知的变化,是否通过PTSD治疗过程中感知到的负担感和归属感受挫的变化而间接相关。参与者(N = 107)是参加住院治疗项目的退伍军人,他们被诊断患有完全或亚阈值PTSD并接受了CPT。PTSD症状严重程度的变化和关于自我的负面认知预测了自杀念头的变化,β分别为0.18,p < .001和β为0.50,p < .001。PTSD症状严重程度的变化和关于自我的负面认知通过感知到的负担感的变化与自杀念头间接相关,β = 0.16,95%置信区间[0.07,0.25];β = 0.27,95%置信区间[0.05,0.50],但在单独模型中与归属感受挫无关,β = -0.002;95%置信区间[-0.06,0.06];β = 0.06,95%置信区间[-0.12,0.21]。这些发现表明,住院CPT可能通过重构负面信念(包括认为自己是他人负担的认知)和/或减轻PTSD的客观负担,而在降低自杀倾向方面具有独特优势。