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Athletes are not at greater risk for death by suicide: A review

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Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/sms.14316

Keywords

athletes; professional sports; suicidal behavior; suicidal ideation; suicidality; suicide; suicide prevention; suicide risk

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Suicide among athletes is a major mental and public health issue. Research shows that professional and high-performance athletes have lower rates of suicide, but attention should be given to unique factors such as sports-related stress, severe physical injuries, and life stressors after retirement. A multidisciplinary approach is needed to understand and address suicide in athletes and reduce morbidity and mortality related to suicide.
IntroductionSuicide represents a major mental and public health issue. Elite athletes share certain individual and environmental characteristics that may increase their risk for mental illnesses, ultimately leading to suicide. This notion conflicts with the general perception of athletes, being the healthiest representatives of society. MethodsA comprehensive literature search was carried out through PubMed and Embase databases for relevant publications. ResultsRecent calls for investigating suicidality among athletes resulted in a considerable amount of literature providing some evidence regarding lower rates of suicide among professional and high-performance athletes as well as similar incidence and prevalence of mental conditions, which are known as risk factors for suicide. Nevertheless, special attention is required in this population as predisposing and precipitating factors might differ from classical features of suicidality in the general population. Sports physicians, sports psychiatrists, and other mental health professionals in elite sports should be aware of early signs of affective disorders, risk of recreational drug abuse, misuse of performance-enhancing medications, sport-specific environmental stressors, serious physical injuries, and presence of physical or mental illness, all of which may increase suicidality. Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is with suicide with higher severity correlated with increased risk. Compared to active athletes, former athletes may have higher rates of suicide due to common life stressors occurring after sports retirement. ConclusionsThe findings suggest a multidisciplinary approach to suicidality in elite athletes, the main goal of which should be the reduction of suicide-related morbidity and mortality. Further research is required to clarify the existing gaps in the current knowledge of the issue. While having lower rates of suicide, athletes share some similar (affective disorders, drug abuse, mental and physical illness) and unique factors (misuse of performance-enhancing substances, sports-related stressors, sports injuries, TBI) putting them at risk of suicide during active career and retirement.

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