Emergency department youth patients with suicidal ideation or attempts: Predicting suicide attempts through 18 months of follow-up
Auteurs
Joan Rosenbaum Asarnow, Michele Berk, Lily Zhang, Peter Wang, Lingqi Tang.
Résumé
This prospective study of suicidal emergency department (ED) patients (ages 10–18) examined the timing, cumulative probability, and predictors of suicide attempts through 18 months of follow-up. The cumulative probability of attempts was as follows: .15 at 6 months, .22 at 1 year, and .24 by 18 months. One attempt was fatal, yielding a death rate of .006. Significant predictors of suicide attempt risk included a suicide attempt at ED presentation (vs. suicidal ideation only), nonsuicidal self-injurious behavior, and low levels of delinquent symptoms. Results underscore the importance of both prior suicide attempts and nonsuicidal self-harm as risk indicators for future and potentially lethal suicide attempts. ÉTATS-UNIS GENRE HOMME FEMME ENFANT ADOLESCENT IDÉATION TENTATIVE URGENCE HOSPITALISATION CONGÉ-HOSPITALIER SUIVI ÉTUDE-PROSPECTIVE RÉCIDIVE ANTÉCÉDENT-SUICIDAIRE
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