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Chapter 24

Chapter 24. Suicide. Suicide. A significant public health problem in the United States In 2008 Eleventh leading cause of death 32,000 completed suicides. Risk Factors. Psychiatric disorders Alcohol or substance use disorders Male gender Increasing age Race Religion Marriage

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Chapter 24

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  1. Chapter 24 Suicide

  2. Suicide • A significant public health problem in the United States • In 2008 • Eleventh leading cause of death • 32,000 completed suicides

  3. Risk Factors Psychiatric disorders Alcohol or substance use disorders Male gender Increasing age Race Religion Marriage Profession Physical health

  4. Biological Factors • Suicidal behavior tends to run in families • Low serotonin levels are related to depressed mood

  5. Psychosocial Factors • Freud – aggression turned inward • Menninger • The wish to kill • The wish to be killed • The wish to die • Aaron Beck – central emotional factor is hopelessness • Recent theories – combination of suicidal fantasies and significant loss

  6. Cultural Factors • Protective factors • African Americans • Religion, role of the extended family • Hispanic Americans • Roman Catholic religion and importance of extended family • Asian Americans • Adherence to religions that tend to emphasize interdependence between the individual and society

  7. Societal Factors Oregon’s Death with Dignity Act of 1994–terminally ill patients allowed physician-assisted suicide Netherlands – nonterminal cases of “lasting and unbearable” suffering Belgium– nonterminal cases when suffering “constant and cannot be alleviated” Switzerland – assisted suicide legal since 1918

  8. Assessment: Overt Statements • “I can't take it anymore.” • “Life isn't worth living anymore.” • “I wish I were dead.” • “Everyone would be better off if I died.”

  9. Assessment: Covert Statements • “It's okay, now. Soon everything will be fine.” • “Things will never work out.” • “I won't be a problem much longer.” • “Nothing feels good to me anymore and probably never will.” • “How can I give my body to medical science?”

  10. Assessment: Lethality of Suicide Plan • Is there a specific plan with details? • How lethal is the proposed method? • Is there access to the planned method? • People with definite plans for time, place, and means are at high risk.

  11. Assessment Tools:SAD PERSONS Scale Uses 10 major risk factors to assess suicidal potential 1.Sex (male) 6.Rational thinking loss 2.Age 25 to 44 or 7.Social supports lacking 65+ years or recent loss 3.Depression 8.Organized plan 4.Previous attempt 9.No spouse 5.Ethanol use 10.Sickness

  12. Nursing Diagnoses • Risk for suicide • Ineffective coping • Hopelessness • Powerlessness • Social isolation

  13. Levels of Intervention • Primary–activities that provide support, information, and education to prevent suicide • Secondary–treatment of the actual suicidal crisis • Tertiary–interventions with the family and friends of a person who has committed suicide to reduce the traumatic aftereffects

  14. Basic Level Interventions • Milieu therapy with suicidal precautions • Counseling • Health teaching and health promotion • Case management • Pharmacological interventions

  15. Survivors of Completed Suicide: Postintervention • Surviving friends and family • Overwhelming guilt, shame • Difficulties discussing the often taboo subject of suicide • Staff • Group support essential as treatment team conducts a thorough postmortem assessment and review

  16. Advanced Practice Interventions • Psychotherapy • Psychobiological interventions • Clinical supervision • Consultation

  17. A patient is hospitalized with major depression and suicidal ideation. He has a history of several suicide attempts. For the first 2 days of hospitalization, the patient eats 20% of meals and stays in his room between groups. By the fourth day, the nurse observes the patient is more sociable, is eating meals, and has a bright affect. Which factor should the nurse consider? The patient:

  18. is showing improvement and may be ready for discharge. may have decided to commit suicide; the nurse should reassess suicidality. is feeling rested, supported by the therapeutic milieu, and less depressed. is benefiting from the antidepressant he has been taking for 4 days.

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