General medical, mental health, and demographic risk factors associated with suicide by firearm compared with other means
Recommended Citation
Boggs JM, Beck A, Hubley S, Peterson EL, Hu Y, Williams KL, Prabhakar D, Rossom RC, Lynch FL, Lu CY, Waitzfelder BE, Owen-Smith AA, Simon GE, Ahmedani B. General medical, mental health, and demographic risk factors associated with suicide by firearm compared with other means. Psychiatric services 2018; 69(6):677-684.
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
6-1-2018
Publication Title
Psychiatric services
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Mitigation of suicide risk by reducing access to lethal means, such as firearms and potentially lethal medications, is a highly recommended practice. To better understand groups of patients at risk of suicide in medical settings, the authors compared demographic and clinical risk factors between patients who died by suicide by using firearms or other means with matched patients who did not die by suicide (control group).
METHODS: In a case-control study in 2016 from eight health care systems within the Mental Health Research Network, 2,674 suicide cases from 2010-2013 were matched to a control group (N=267,400). The association between suicide by firearm or other means and medical record information on demographic characteristics, general medical disorders, and mental disorders was assessed.
RESULTS: The odds of having a mental disorder were higher among cases of suicide involving a method other than a firearm. Fourteen general medical disorders were associated with statistically significant (p
CONCLUSIONS: Medical providers should consider targeting suicide risk screening for patients with any mental disorder, TBI, epilepsy, HIV, psychogenic pain, stroke, and migraine. When suicide risk is detected, counseling on reducing access to lethal means should include both firearms and other means for at-risk groups.
PubMed ID
29446332
Volume
69
Issue
6
First Page
677
Last Page
684