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Original Research

Violent and Serious Suicide Attempters: One Step Closer to Suicide?

Lucas Giner, MD, PhD; Isabelle Jaussent, PhD; Emilie Olié, MD; Séverine Béziat, MSc; Sébastien Guillaume, MD, PhD; Enrique Baca-Garcia, MD, PhD; Jorge Lopez-Castroman, MD, PhD; and Philippe Courtet, MD, PhD

Published: March 15, 2014

Article Abstract

Background: The use of violence in a suicide attempt and its medical consequences can be used to characterize specific subpopulations of suicide attempters that could be at higher risk of ever completing suicide.

Method: A population of 1,148 suicide attempters was consecutively recruited from 2001 to 2010. Violent suicide attempts were classified using Asberg’s criteria. An overdose requiring hospitalization in an intensive care unit was considered a serious suicide attempt. In this exploratory study, we retrospectively compared 183 subjects who made a serious suicide attempt, 226 that made a violent suicide attempt, and 739 without any history of serious or violent suicide attempts with regard to demographic, clinical, and psychological characteristics and features of the suicide attempts using univariate and multivariate analyses.

Results: In comparison with subjects whose attempts were neither violent nor serious, violent attempters and serious attempters were more likely to make repeated suicide attempts (OR = 3.27 [95% CI, 1.39-7.70] and OR = 2.66 [95% CI, 1.29-5.50], respectively), with higher medical lethality (OR = 6.66 [95% CI, 4.74-9.38] and OR = 3.91 [95% CI, 2.89-5.29], respectively). Additionally, violent attempts were associated with male gender (OR = 6.79; 95% CI, 3.59-12.82) and family history of suicidal behavior (particularly if serious or violent: OR = 6.96; 95% CI, 2.82-17.20), and serious attempters were more likely to be older (OR = 1.49, 95% CI, 1.12-1.99).

Conclusions: One of every 3 attempters in our sample had made violent or serious suicide attempts in their lifetime. Violent attempters and serious attempters presented differential characteristics, closer to those of suicide completers, compared to the rest of the sample.

J Clin Psychiatry 2014;75(3):e191-e197

Submitted: April 12, 2013; accepted October 30, 2013 (doi:10.4088/JCP.13m08524).

Corresponding author: Jorge Lopez-Castroman, MD, PhD, Departement d’ Urgences et Post-Urgences Psychiatriques, Hopital Lapeyronie, 371, avenue du Doyen Gaston Giraud, 34295 Montpellier, France ([email protected]).

Volume: 75

Quick Links: Depression (MDD) , Suicide

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