4.6 Article

Characteristics of suicide attempts associated with lethality and method: A latent class analysis of the Military Suicide Research Consortium

Journal

JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRIC RESEARCH
Volume 149, Issue -, Pages 54-61

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jpsychires.2022.02.016

Keywords

Veterans; Military; Suicide attempt; Lethality; Disclosure; Latent class analysis

Categories

Funding

  1. VISN-2 VA MIRECC Fellowship in Advanced Psychiatry and Psychology and Office of Academic Affiliations (OAA)

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While suicide prevention is a national priority, there is still a lack of understanding of suicide-related outcomes. Person-centered approaches have the potential to identify unique risk profiles and subgroups. This study used latent class analysis to identify latent subgroups among suicide attempt survivors and compared them based on demographics and attempt characteristics. The findings have implications for risk assessments and highlight the importance of subjective perceptions about suicidal behavior.
While suicide prevention is a national priority, particularly among service members and veterans (SMVs), understanding of suicide-related outcomes remains poor. Person-centered approaches (e.g., latent class analysis) have promise to identify unique risk profiles and subgroups in the larger population. The current study identified latent subgroups characterized by prior self-directed violence history and proximal risk factors for suicide among suicide attempt survivors, and compared subgroups on demographics and most-lethal attempt characteristics. Participants included civilians and SMVs reporting lifetime suicide attempt(s) (n = 2643) from the Military Suicide Research Consortium. Two classes emerged from Common Data Elements: suicide attempt and non suicidal self-injury frequency, suicide attempt method, perceived likelihood of future suicide, suicide disclosure, suicide intent, and perceived and actual lethality of attempt. A Higher-Risk History class was characterized by greater intent to die, certainty about attempt fatality and method lethality, belief injury would be medically unfixable, and likelihood of prior non-suicidal self-injury. A Lower-Risk History class was characterized by greater ambivalence toward death and methods. Higher-Risk class members were more likely to be male, older, SMVs, have less formal education, use firearms as most-lethal attempt method, and require a higher degree of medical attention. Lower-Risk class members were more likely to be female, civilian, use cutting as most-lethal attempt method, and require less medical attention for attempts. Findings have implications for risk assessments and highlight the importance of subjective perceptions about suicidal behavior. Further investigation of real-time individual-level is necessary, especially for SMVs who may be at greatest risk for potentially lethal suicidal behavior.

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