Suicide in the mentally ill

Navneet Kapur
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引用次数: 12

Abstract

Patients with mental illness are at a greatly increased risk of suicide. Approximately 90% of those who die by suicide are suffering from a psychiatric disorder at the time of death. The relationship between mental illness and psychiatric disorder can be investigated by the retrospective collection of detailed information from interviews with informants (psychological autopsy study) or by following up those with mental illness and recording the incidence of suicide (cohort study). Affective disorder is probably associated with the greatest increase in suicide risk. Risk factors for suicide may vary from diagnosis to diagnosis, between age groups, by treatment setting, and by country. Much of what we know about suicide in the mentally ill in the UK is based on data collected for an ongoing national clinical survey (the National Confidential Inquiry into Suicide and Homicide by People with Mental Illness). Patients who die by suicide while in-patients or shortly after discharge from hospital may be a particularly important group because the circumstances of their death could highlight deficiencies in service provision. Rates of suicide among psychiatric in-patients in the UK are falling. The rigorous clinical assessment and treatment of mental disorder is a useful starting point for reducing suicide in the mentally ill, but the evidence base for this is not strong. This is partly because suicide is a rare event. General strategies for suicide prevention and specific strategies to reduce suicide in those in mental health contact are both likely to be important.

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精神病患者自杀
患有精神疾病的患者自杀的风险大大增加。大约90%的自杀者在死亡时患有精神疾病。精神疾病和精神障碍之间的关系可以通过对举报人的访谈(心理解剖研究)或通过对精神疾病患者的随访并记录自杀发生率(队列研究)来回顾性收集详细信息。情感障碍可能与自杀风险的最大增加有关。自杀的危险因素可能因诊断、年龄组、治疗环境和国家而异。我们对英国精神病患者自杀的了解大多是基于一项正在进行的全国临床调查(全国精神病患者自杀和杀人秘密调查)收集的数据。住院期间或出院后不久自杀死亡的病人可能是一个特别重要的群体,因为他们的死亡情况可能突出了服务提供方面的缺陷。英国精神病住院病人的自杀率正在下降。对精神障碍进行严格的临床评估和治疗是减少精神疾病患者自杀的一个有用的起点,但这方面的证据基础并不充分。这部分是因为自杀是一种罕见的事件。预防自杀的一般策略和减少心理健康接触者自杀的具体策略可能都很重要。
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Contents Editorial Board Mental illness, dangerousness and protecting society Personal autonomy and mental capacity The Mental Health Act and the Mental Capacity Act: untangling the relationship
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