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Release Date: Oct. 18, 2004
AWARENESS HELPS PRIMARY DOCTORS PREVENT PATIENTS’ SUICIDE
By Aaron Levin, Science Writer
Health Behavior News Service
Although few of their patients commit suicide in a year, primary care physicians
should use office visits to note possible risk factors for suicidal behavior,
bolstered by candid discussions if needed, according to a review of recent
research.
“Primary care physicians are urged to consider the complex, subtle and
even convoluted ways in which depressed patients and others overtly or covertly
seek and respond to help when experiencing death wishes,” says lead study
author Herbert C. Schulberg, Ph.D., M.S.Hyg., of Weill Medical College, Cornell
University in White Plains, N.Y.
The research appears in the journal General Hospital Psychiatry.
Suicide caused the death of 30,622 people in 2001, according to the U.S. Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention. Some populations are at greater risk, however.
The highest suicide rate is among white men age 65 years or older, and suicide
is the third-leading cause of death among young people age 15 to 24.
Although patient suicide rates are under 1 percent per year for the average
doctor, studies have shown that 45 percent of victims had visited their primary
care physicians in the month before killing themselves, Schulberg reports.
The role of primary care physicians is important because only 14 percent of
patients who commit suicide were seeing a psychiatrist or mental health professional
at the time.
Discerning potential suicides from
other patients isn’t simple, Schulberg
says: “Visit patterns per se are not thought to be sufficiently distinctive
to alert physicians to their patients’ death wishes.”
Doctors should always note major risk factors like prior suicide attempts,
depression, a history of severe mental illness or alcohol and drug abuse. As
many as a third of people who commit suicide have some serious physical illness,
but most of them do not.
Given that there are so few suicides among patients each year, screening all
patients would be a waste of time for doctors, the U.S. Preventive Services
Task Force says. However, questioning a patient with some of these risk factors
may reveal suicidal thinking.
Many doctors fear that openly addressing
the issue of suicide in depressed patients may trigger suicidal thoughts
or action, Schulberg says. But directly
asking them, “Are you feeling suicidal?” may often be as useful
as a more formal clinical interview, he says.
With older patients, doctors may want to open discussions by addressing end-of-life
issues.
“The physician can possibly uncover feelings of depression, fear of
pain, unwillingness to suffer, and associated plans for self-initiated life-ending
behaviors that would otherwise remain unnoted,” he says. They should
also ask elderly patients about prescription medications which might be misused
and about the availability of firearms.
Both psychotherapy and antidepressant medications can help depressed, potentially
suicidal patients, he says. Suicide rates decline in populations using antidepressants,
and many of these patients can be successfully managed by non-psychiatrists.
“Primary care physicians can successfully be trained to prescribe antidepressants
within guideline standards and to achieve clinical outcomes matching those
obtained by psychiatrists,” he says.
Schulberg also suggests that a nurse
or social worker may take over some follow-up tasks for the physician, given
the demands on the latter’s time. These “case
managers” can maintain in-person or telephone contact with the patient
and observe whether suicidal thinking has changed and if patients are taking
medications properly.
Much more research is needed to
confirm suicide prevention strategies and clinical interventions in primary
care, Schulberg says. In the meantime, coupling
the risk factors for suicide with an understanding of the patient’s specific
life circumstances may help physicians decide on when and how to intervene
with potentially suicidal patients.
This study was supported by a grant from the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur
Foundation, which also funds the Health Behavior News Service.
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FOR MORE INFORMATION:
Health Behavior News Service: (202) 387-2829 or www.hbns.org.
Center for the Advancement of Health
Contact: Ira R. Allen
Vice President of Public Affairs
202.387.2829
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