Daily monitoring of temporal trajectories of suicidal ideation predict self-injury: A novel application of patient progress monitoring
Auteurs
Emma Restifo, Shraddha Kashyap, Geoff R Hooke, Andrew C Page.
Résumé
textbfObjective: The interpersonal theory of suicide argues that suicidal ideation predicts self-injury. We hypothesized that distinct patterns of suicidal ideation could be identified and these ratings could allow early identification of self-injury. textbfMethod: The sample consisted of 562 psychiatric inpatients who reported suicidal ideation. textbfResults: Latent growth class analysis identified five classes of change in suicidal ideation. Patients who displayed prolonged suicidal ideation could be identified with improved sensitivity (89.66%) and negative predictive power (94%), compared to a model based on routine ratings of suicidality at admission (sensitivity = 50%; negative predictive power = 74%). These patients had a fourfold increased risk of self-injury. textbfConclusions: Daily measurement of suicidal ideation may identify inpatients at risk and inform clinical decision-making. IDÉATION DÉPISTAGE POTENTIEL-SUICIDAIRE THÉORIE FARDEAU APPARTENANCE PERCEPTION-SOI INTÉGRATION-SOCIALE
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