Title: Alan Apter M.D
1suicide
- Alan Apter M.D
- Feinberg Child Study Center
- Schneider Childrens Medical Center
2Suicidal Behaviour a Major Public Health Problem
in Europe In many European countries suicide
is the leading cause of death among young people
more common than death from road accidents
3SUICIDE
- DEFINITIONS
- EPIDEMIOLOGY
- AETIOLOGY/RISK FACTORS
- CLINICAL CONSIDERATIONS
4SUICIDE
- PRIMARY PREVENTION
- SECONDARY PREVENTION
- TERTIARY PREVENTION
5DEFINITIONS
6Suicide Spectrum
- Suicidal ideation "Thoughts of serving as the
agent of ones own death. Suicidal ideation may
vary in seriousness depending on the specificity
of suicide plans and the degree of suicidal
intent" - Suicidal threats
- Suicidal gestures "Suicidal behaviors judged to
be non-serious in intent or medical lethality"
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8Suicide Spectrum
- Deliberate self harm Willful self-inflicting of
painful, destructive, or injurious acts without
intent to die -
- Suicide attempts Self-injurious behavior with a
nonfatal outcome accompanied by evidence (either
explicit or implicit) that the person intended at
some level to kill him/her
9Suicide Spectrum
- Interrupted attempt The person is interrupted
(by an outside circumstance) from starting the
self-injurious act
10Continuum Theory Of Suicide
- Suicidal Thoughts
- leads to
- Suicidal Threats
- Leads to
11 Suicidal Gestures Leads toSuicide
Attempts leads to Failed Suicide leads
toCompleted Suicide
12 Discontinuity TheorySuicidal
IdeationSuicidal ThreatsSuicidal
GesturesSuicide AttemptsSerious Suicide
Attempts
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14 Suicide attempts
Completed suicide
15Consequences of Suicidal Behavior
- School dropout
- Leaving home
- Motor accidents
- Police arrest
- Whole spectrum of high risk behavior
16EPIDEMIOLOGY
17EPIDEMIOLOGY
- SEX
- AGE
- GEOGRAPHY
- SOCIECONOMIC STATUS
- ETHNICITY
- RELIGION
- COHORT STATUS
18EPIDIMIOLOGY OF SUICIDE
- 300 rise in fatal suicide
- gt700 rise in non fatal suicidal behavior
- 10- 30 of adolescents think seriously about
suicide
19Attempted Suicide
- Between 100 and 300 per 100,000
- Preponderance of females in all countries
- 50 percent of attempters under 30
- Excess of divorced persons
20Attempted Suicide Rates
- Lower social classes overrepresented
- Depression in 35 to 79 percent of cases
- Females aged 15 to 19 - highest rates
- 1 in 100 in this group attempt suicide each year
- Highest rate for males is in aged 25 to 29
- 1 in 200 attempts suicide each year
21Suicide
- Suicide rates increase with age
- Male suicides peak after age 45
- Females peak after age 55
- Rates of 40 per 100,000 men gt 65
22Suicide
- Males at all ages commit suicide more often than
females - Male female suicide ratios range from 21 to 71
- Males use more violent methods, like hanging,
shooting, and jumping
23Suicide
- Females more often overdose or drown
- Ethnic and minority groups tend to be more
cohesive and have lower suicide rates - Rate of suicide among whites is nearly twice that
among nonwhites (in the US)
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25Attempted suicide by age and sex Holon-Bat Yam
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27Suicide by age
28 29SUICIDE IN INDIA
30Homicide and suicide rates by year
31Total suicide rates per 100,000 for 15 year olds
and over in European countries
Source World Health Statistics Annuals (WHO).
Latest available year. Wasserman, D., Jiang, GX.
32Change in percentage of suicide rates for males
aged 15 years and over in European countries
between 1989-90 and 1995-96.
Source World Health Statistics Annuals (WHO).
Latest available year. Wasserman, D., Jiang, GX.
33EPIDEMIOLOGY
- ELDERLY COMMIT/YOUNG ATTEMPT
- PROTESTANTSgtCATHOLICSgt
- JEWSgtMUSLIMS
- POOR ATTEMPT/RICH COMMIT
- BLACKSltWHITES
- HISPANICS AND S.EUROPEANS ATEMPT
34AETIOLOGY/RISK FACTORS
35AETIOLOGY/RISK FACTORS
- PSYCHIATRIC ILLNESS
- ALCAHOLISM SUBSTANCE ABUSE
- PHYSICAL AND SEXUAL ABUSE
- FAMILY AND GENETICS
36Risk Factors (ii)
- CONTAGION
- AVAILABILITY OF MEANS
- PERSONALITY FACTORS
- BIOLOGY
37PSYCHIATRIC ILLNESS
- DEPRESSION
- SCHIZOPHRENIA
- ANXIETY DISORDERS
- DISSOCIATIVE DISORDERS
38PSYCHIATRIC ILLNESS
- CONDUCT DISORDER
- ANOREXIA NERVOSA
- BULIMIA NERVOSA
- PERSONALITY DISORDERS
39Risk factors for youth suicide
- Psychiatric disorder/Affective disorder
- Personality disorder- especially BPD
- Psychiatric illnesses dangerous when more than
one illness is present
40Four co-morbid constellations
- The combination of schizophrenia, depression and
substance abuse - Substance abuse, conduct disorder and depression
- Affective disorder, eating disorder and anxiety
disorders - Affective disorder, personality disorder and
dissociate disorder
41ALCAHOLISM SUBSTANCE ABUSE
- SELF MEDICATION
- INCREASES IMPULSIVITY
- AFFFECTS JUDGEMENT
- EXACERBATES DEPRESSION
- PROVIDES COURAGE
42Personality Factors
- Adolescents committing suicide while doing their
military service in the IDF - Clinical work on an adolescent psychiatric
inpatient unit - Work in the ER
43Three sets of personality constellations
- Narcissism , perfectionism and the inability to
tolerate failure - Impulsive and aggressive characteristics combined
with over sensitivity - Hopelessness often related to underlying
depression
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45The narcissistic perfectionist constellation
(case 1)
- David told us that since age 8 he had been
concerned by thoughts of death. -
- At 11 he told his friends that he would kill
himself on the day of his Bar-Mitzvah. A week
before the event he wrote an elaborate suicide
note addressed to his parents in which he stated
that he did not believe in the hereafter and that
he would just cease to exist.
46Contd
- Despite being popular at school it soon became
clear that David had no intimate friendships. - After one year of therapy and extensive
psychological testing and observation no axis I
diagnosis could be made. -
47Case 2
- Jonathan was a 20 year old officer when he
killed himself. His family was achievement
oriented and had high moral standards. Their
ideals stressed controlling ones emotions and
living up to high standards. - Jonathan was a natural leader and popular with
his teachers and peers. In the army he excelled
and was selected as an instructor for new
recruits. His superior commended him for his
ability to perform under stress. -
48Case 2
- He became totally involved in his new duties.
- His platoon of trainees did rather well,
although their overall performance rating was
only average. - Following the course ceremony Jonathan went to
his room and shot himself. -
49Features of psychological post mortem soldiers
- Strong narcissistic and perfectionist patterns
- Schizoid traits in personality
- The will to prove their worth
- High self expectations and hopes
- Termed by being private/isolated people
50- THESE FEATURES ARE OFTEN COMPLICATED BY STRONG
ISOLATIVE TRAITS
51Distribution Of Axis II Diagnoses WithinComplete
Suicide Group
52Case features
No turning for help or support
- Minor setbacks spiral into disaster
Better death than shame
53THE IMPULSIVE AGGRESSIVE CONSTELLATION
54Case material case 1
- Deborah had always been impulsive and
oppositional from an early age. - At about the age of 11 she developed anorexia
nervosa probably as a result of her being an
accomplished dancer in a ballet troop. - With the onset of adolescence she developed
very severe bulimia.
55- Her first admission to a psychiatric unit was
occasioned by a suicide note, which she wrote to
her teacher at school. - In the unit she was an impossible patient. By
the time she was 22 she had made over 100 suicide
attempts. - She received all kinds of psychosocial and
biological therapies but to no avail, although
with age (now 25) there is some tempering of her
emotional instability.
56Case material case 2
- Amit, an 18 year old soldier killed himself a
few months after joining the army. - He had grown up under conditions of economic
deprivation. - The home atmosphere consisted of his mothers
angry accusations and fathers passive silences. -
57Case 2 (contd.)
- Amit did poorly in elementary school, however
managed to complete a vocational high school with
fairly good grades. - During high school his behavior changed and
he became more compliant. - Amit looked forward to his army service,
feeling that it would make a man out of him and
requested a frontline unit. - He was a highly motivated recruit but tended
to become flustered under stress .
58Case 2 (cont.)
- Once when returning late from a home pass, he
was told that his next leave was cancelled. - He became irritable and angry.
- When the teaching staff on the base broached
the possibility of him being unsuitable for a
front-line unit he became upset and insisted on
continuing. While resting after a training
exercise the other recruits began taunting him,
Amit lost his temper and attacked his tormenter. - When the 2 were separated, he ran to his tent
and shot himself with his weapon.
59Personality constellation
- There are certain individuals who, when faced
with relatively minor life stressors will react
with anger and anxiety and then develop a
secondary depression which is often accompanied
by suicidal behavior.
60Van Praag (1997)
- serotonin-related anxiety/aggression stressor
precipitated depression
61Thanatos
- A tendency towards impulsive aggression may
predispose suicidal behavior - The risk increases when psychiatric disorder and
impulsive aggressive personality traits co-occur
(Kety, 1986) - The wish to die the wish to kill and the wish to
be killed (Freuds death instinct)
62Adults vs. youngsters
- There is now substantial evidence that suicide in
younger people is a somewhat different phenomenon
than among adults - Specifically, there is more impulsivity,
substance abuse and other personality disorders
in younger completed suicides
63Genetics of suicidal behavior
- Impulsivity and aggression are likely to be
involved in the genetics of suicidal behavior - Higher familial loading for suicidal behavior was
found in those attempters and completers who made
more dangerous attempts and who were more
aggressive
64Serotonin, suicide and aggression
- Finding the link between altered serotonergic
neurotransmission, suicidal behavior and
impulsive violence - Orders of magnitude have been noted in the
correlations between measures of serotonin,
suicide attempts, aggression and impulsive risk
taking
65Borderline personality disorder (BPD)
- Traditionally associated with non fatal attempts
and intentional self-damaging acts - One of the critical symptoms is affective
instability - Most adolescent patients require psychiatric help
and often suffer from major depression
66Borderline personality disorder (BPD)
- Anger and Violence - related symptoms.
- Co morbid conditions conduct disorder,
multi-impulsive bulimia and substance abuse - About 9 of patients eventually kill themselves
67Impulsivity
- The adolescent period in contemporary Western
society is characterized by a distinctive pattern
of morbidity and mortality - Suicidal behavior and completed suicide are more
common in adolescence than in any other
developmental epoch (save, for males, in old age)
68Impulsivity
- Leading causes of adolescent deaths ( in the
West) accidents, homicide, and suicide--are
preventable - Associated with life-styles characterized by
impulsivity, recklessness, and substance or
alcohol use
69Impulsivity
- Adolescence in the industrialized world
characterized by increased health-threatening
behaviors - Tobacco, alcohol, and drug use unprotected sex
fighting reckless driving and weapon-carrying
(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 2000)
70Continuum of Self Destructiveness"
- Covert (e.g. substance use, unprotected and
precocious sexual activity, reckless driving) - Overt (e.g. self-mutilation and suicide attempts)
- Suicidal behaviors and other risk behaviors share
an association with psychiatric diagnoses such as
mood, disruptive, substance use, and anxiety
disorders
71MENTAL-ILLNESS DEMORALIZATION HOPLESSNESS
CONSTELLATION
72Case material case 1
- David, aged 18, came from a family with a
distinguished military background. He appeared to
have had a poor self image during his school
years, with intermittent periods of depression,
insomnia, and weight loss.
73case 1
- David really looked forward to his army service,
hoping that success there would redeem his low
self esteem. He applied to join an elite commando
unit but was turned down by the unit
psychologist.
74case 1
- However, after advanced training David was posted
to a combat unit. He seemed to do well but
complained to his parents of being unable to
cope. His parents alerted the unit mental health
officer, who interviewed David. - During the examination David denied experiencing
any depression or suicidal thoughts, but David
was reassigned. The reassignment made David feel
like a failure soon thereafter he fatally shot
himself.
75Case material case 2 (The case of Ellen West)
- Ellen West was the daughter of wealthy Jewish
parents who had great control over her. - Her father interfered twice when she became
engaged, and when she finally married it was to a
cousin. -
76Ellen West
- From age 19 she developed the fear of becoming
fat and by 21 had developed Anorexia Nervosa. - She was hospitalized but this only increased
her suicidal thoughts. - She was discharged from the sanatorium at the
request of her family.
77The case of Ellen West
- On the third day after returning home she
appeared to be a changed person she ate and
enjoyed a walk with her husband. That evening she
took a lethal dose of poison.
78Eating disorders
- Adolescents with Bulimia Nervosa highly prone
to suicidal behaviors - Impulsive and unstable life style.
- Often make serious suicide attempts, which
sometimes succeed. - Multi-impulsive bulimia was coined to
describe the increasingly more common association
between bulimia, BPD, substance abuse, depression
and conduct disorder. - Although most patients with this co-morbid
constellation of disorders are women, they are
nevertheless at risk of repeated Para-suicide and
fatal suicide.
79The Canterbury suicide project
- A case control study. It was found that there was
an elevated risk for mood disorder, substance
disorder and conduct disorder. - The study looked at male and female Finnish
adolescents 10 years after having received
outpatient psychiatric care. They found that 16
male subjects but no female subjects had died.
80Study findings
- Current suicidal ideation and suicide attempts,
poor psychosocial functioning and a
recommendation for psychiatric hospitalization
during the index treatment were associated with
male mortality and suicidality. - The study found that 10 of male adolescent
inpatients and about 1 female inpatients
eventually kill themselves.
81Study at psychiatric unit
- One group recently surveyed admissions to our
adolescent unit for a period of 24 months - Most suicidal patients suffered from Affective
and Conduct disorder, others had eating disorders
or anxiety disorders - The recent upsurge of drug and alcohol abuse in
our country has led to an even higher incidence
of suicidal patients in our ward
82Depression
- Major depression appears acutely in a previously
healthy child. - Many other difficulties such as attention
disorder or separation anxiety disorder before
becoming depressed - Mood disorders tend to be chronic
- In some cases they may be psychotic and have
hallucinations and delusions of guilt
83Bipolar disorder
- Approximately 20 of all patients have their
first episode during adolescence (bet.15-19) - Lack of clinician awareness has led to under
diagnosis or misdiagnosis in children and
adolescents
84Unique clinical characteristics associated with
the early-onset form
- Manic or depressive episodes
- Increased risk for completed suicides.
- Strober et al (1995)
- Subjects made at least one medically significant
suicide attempt. - Depressive and manic depressive disorders.
- Patients who are male or in the depressed phase
are at higher risk. - A major clinical problem is that severe
depression is common in almost all the patients
and its difficult to determine what is primary
and what is secondary.
85Schizophrenia
- A common psychiatry disorder of adolescence
- Some clinicians are hesitant to make this
diagnosis which denies the child and family
access to appropriate treatment - When the diagnosis is made the patient must be
followed longitudinally to ensure accuracy
86- Patients and families should be educated about
these issues - Many patients are depressed and suicidal.
- About 10-15 of patients eventually commit
suicide - Most victims are unmarried men who have made
previous suicide attempts (often shortly after
discharge) - Many adolescent patients also abuse drugs and
alcohol - sometimes an attempt at self medication
87Study
- Participants
- 32 adolescent inpatients with affective disorders
(16 suicidal and 16 non-suicidal) - 33 adolescent inpatients diagnosed with BPD (17
suicidal and 16 non-suicidal)
88- All subjects were diagnosed using the Hebrew
version of the childrens version of K-SDADS. - The subjects were examined on 8 measures relevant
to suicidal behavior - The BDI BHS SPS SIS ICS OAS MAI SRM.
- Three dimensions were found on factor analysis
- Anger-impulsivity-aggression
- Depression and hopelessness
- Suicidality
-
89Anger
- Anger in subjects was examined via a two way
analysis of variance (diagnosis/suicidality) - Only diagnosis was found to significantly be
associated with anger (F1,6117.31pgt0.0001)
being significantly higher in the BPD subjects
than in the depressive adolescents - The pair-wise Scheffe however showed that anger
was significantly higher in the BPD suicidals
than in the depressed non-suicidals
90Impulsivity
- Impulsivity in subjects was examined by a two way
analysis of variance (diagnosis/suicidality).
Only diagnosis was found to significantly be
associated with impulsivity (F1,6133.66plt0.0001)
, with anger being significantly higher in the
BPD subjects than in the depressive adolescents.
There was also a strong inter-action between
impulsivity suicidality and diagnosis
(F1,614.47plt0.039). Thus impulsivity was higher
in BPD than in depressive and in suicidal BPD
compared to non-suicidal BPD. There was no
difference between depressive suicidals and
depressive non-suicidals. In addition BPD
non-suicidal subjects were more impulsive than
depressive suicidal subjects. Thus impulsivity
does not appear to play an important role in
suicidal depression in adolescents.
91Overt Aggression
- Aggression in subjects was examined by two way
analysis of variance (diagnosis/suicidality).
Diagnosis was found to significantly be
associated with impulsivity (F1,6119.14plt0.0001)
as was suicidality (F1,6118.75plt0.0001), with
anger being significantly higher in the BPD
subjects than in the depressive adolescents.
Aggression was significantly higher in the BPD
suicidals than the BPD non-suicidals but did not
differentiate between the depressed suicidals and
the depressed non-suicidals. Thus impulsivity
does not appear to play an important role in
suicidal depression in adolescents.
92Depressive symptoms and Hopelessness
- Depressive symptoms (BDI) in subjects was
examined by two way analysis of variance
(diagnosis/suicidality). - Only suicidality was found to significantly be
associated with depressive symptoms
(F1,6131.99plt0.0001), with depressive symptoms
being significantly higher in the suicidal
subjects than in the non-suicidal adolescents in
both diagnostic categories. Exactly the same
findings were shown for hopelessness
(F1,6126.31plt0.0001).
93Suicide Intent
- SIS was significantly higher in the depressed
subjects than in the BPD subjects
(t(31)2.69plt0.011). - SIS correlated negatively and significantly with
impulsivity and aggression.
94Suicide Risk
- Was higher for suicidal than non-suicidal
subjects but did not differentiate between BPD
and depressive suicidals.
95Conclusions
- Suicidal behavior in depressed adolescents
differs from that of BPD adolescents and the
recognized connection between impulsivity,
aggression and suicidality may well relate to BPD
and conduct disorder only. This has important
implications for adolescent suicide research in
general since additional findings regarding the
association with trauma, sex abuse, broken
families, dissociation and drug abuse may also be
related to only one specific type of suicide. - Suicidal behavior can no longer be regarded as on
homogenous group of behaviors and although the
non-nosological approach developed by Van Praag
et al (1997) has been a very fruitful one,
diagnostic and personality differences may well
have a part to play in the understanding of
suicide.
96Canterbury Suicide Project
97(No Transcript)
98Clinical Settings
- Primary Care settings (family or pediatric
practices) - Mental health outpatient departments (OPD)
- Emergency rooms (ER)
- Intensive care units (ICU)
- Residential treatment programs
99Primary Care
- Early Detection of Internalizing Disorders
- Early Treatment of Internalizing Disorders
- Early Referral of Internalizing Disorders
- Referral of Externalizing Disorders
100Early Detection
- Education regarding Childhood Depression and
Anxiety - Routinely Examining for Childhood Depression and
Anxiety - Routine Screening for suicidal ideation (Gould et
al., 2005)
101Early Treatment
- Psycho education (Harrington, 2003)
- Psychopharmacology (TADS, 2005)
- Attenuation of Psychosocial Risk Factors (e.g.
reporting abuse)
102Early Referral
- Psychotherapies are best before complications set
in - Obviates long waiting lists for urgent cases
- Facilitates secondary prevention
103Internalizing Disorders- Summary
- Gatekeeper education in terms of pediatricians is
much under-researched -
- In adult primary care Depression and other
psychiatric disorders are under-recognized and
under-treated in the primary care setting - There is an opportunity for prevention because up
to 83 of those who die by suicide have had
contact with a primary care physician (PCP)
within a year of their death, and up to 66
within a month.
104Internalizing Disorders- - Summary
- PCPs lack of knowledge about and/or failure to
screen patients for depression may contribute to
non-treatment seen in most suicides - Therefore, improving physicians' recognition of
depression and suicide risk is a component of
most national suicide prevention plans -
- However the special role of the pediatrician is
still neglected
105Externalizing Disorders
- PCP often called upon to deal with those
externalizing disorders that highly predispose to
suicidal behavior. - Include conduct disorders, attention deficit
disorders and psychosexual disorders. - Diagnosis is often all too evident and the
primary role of PCP is to alert and mobilize the
appropriate social, educational and legal
authorities.
106Externalizing Disorders
- Pediatricians and specialists in adolescent
medicine need to be trained - in the diagnosis of sexual and physical abuse,
the early stages of drug and alcohol abuse - and to learn to look for the physical signs of
self cutting and disordered eating practices
107Emergency Room Management
- Establish relationship with suicidal individual
and family - Stress importance of treatment
- Admit suicide attempters with persistent wish to
die or clearly abnormal mental state. - Obtain information from third-party.
108Emergency Room Management
- Availability and presence in the home of firearms
and lethal medication must be determined - parents must be explicitly told to remove
firearms and lethal medication . - warn about the dangerous disinhibiting effects of
alcohol and other drugs.
109Emergency Room
- Value of "no-suicide contracts" is not known.
-
- The child or adolescent might not be in a mental
state to accept or understand the contract, and
both family and clinician should know not to
relax their vigilance just because a contract has
been signed. - An appointment should be scheduled for the child
or adolescent to be seen for a fuller evaluation
before discharge from the emergency room.
110Emergency Room Management
- available to the patient and family (for example,
receive and make phone calls outside of
therapeutic hours) - have adequate physician coverage if away
- have experience managing suicidal crises
- have support available for him or herself
111AFTER CARE
- No after care was recommended to 28.5 of the
boys and 25.7 of the girls - A negative attitude towards care and treatment
staff is not unusual among young people
112AFTER CARE
- It is also common not only for adults, but also
for young people to deny suicide acts with great
vehemence (Spirito 1996). - Parents lack of involvement, ignorance of the
suicide attempt, possibly negative attitude of
their own towards care and desire to trivialize
the suicide attempt make it easier for a
teenager to turn down an offer of treatment.
113Intensive Care Units
- The Canterbury Suicide Project
- Almost equal numbers of males and females made
serious suicide attempts - Severe psychiatric disturbance
114Intensive Care Units (Apter A, et al., Compr.
Psychiatry 42 (1) 70-75, 2001)
- 80 subjects
- 20 ICU suicidal,20 non-ICU suicidal, 20
psychiatric non suicidal and 20 control subjects - ICU subjects had significant lower levels of self
disclosure
115Mental Health OPD
- PCP - secondary prevention.
- Are expected to detect those young people who are
at risk for suicide - OPD -children who have already attempted suicide
- Tertiary prevention
116Mental Health OPD
- No treatment has been proven fully effective in
an outpatient setting - depression is the most common diagnosis
- behavioral disorders common. (Kerfoot et
al.,1996). - Also PTSD, eating disorders and schizophrenia
(Herrington Saleem, 2003).
117Psychosocial treatments
- domiciliary oriented outreach programs
- motivational enhancement methods,
- Both non-effective in preventing suicide (Raj,
Kumaraiah Bhide, 2001).
118Psychosocial treatments
- Dialectical behavior therapy effective in
reducing suicide rate in a 6 month follow-up,
non-significant in a 1-year follow-up (Linehan,
Armstrong, Suarez et al., 1991) - Problem-solving skills training effective to a
certain extent in decreasing psychological
distress and the number of suicide attempts
(Salkovskis, Atha Storer, 1990).
119Consequences of Suicidal Behavior
- School dropout
- Leaving home
- Motor accidents
- Police arrest
- Whole spectrum of high risk behavior
120Treatment
- Poor compliance
- Is Emergency room intervention enough?
- Mandatory hospitalization as a policy
121Suicidal Behavior
- Suicide and suicide attempts are frequently
associated with - Axis I disorder
- Depression
- Co-morbid conditions
122Risk factors beyond psychopathology
- One of the most pressing clinical research
questions is to determine what factors predispose
suicide.
123Risk factors for suicidal behavior
- Social factors
- Unemployment
- Poverty
- Availability of guns
- National character
- Biological factors
- Personal factors
124Adults vs. youngsters
- There is now substantial evidence that suicide in
younger people is a somewhat different phenomenon
than among adults. - Specifically, there is more impulsivity,
substance abuse and other personality disorders
in younger completed suicides.
125Genetics of suicidal behavior
- Impulsivity and aggression are likely to be
involved in the genetics of suicidal behavior. - Higher familial loading for suicidal behavior was
found in those attempters and completers who made
more dangerous attempts and who were more
aggressive.
126Serotonin, suicide and aggression
- Finding the link between altered serotonergic
neurotransmission, suicidal behavior and
impulsive violence. - Orders of magnitude have been noted in the
correlations between measures of serotonin,
suicide attempts, aggression and impulsive risk
taking.
127Borderline personality disorder (BPD)
- Traditionally associated with non fatal attempts
and intentional self-damaging acts. - One of the critical symptoms is affective
instability - Most adolescent patients require psychiatric help
and often suffer from major depression. - Anger and Violence - related symptoms.
- Co morbid conditions conduct disorder,
multi-impulsive bulimia and substance abuse. - About 9 of patients eventually kill themselves.
128MENTAL-ILLNESS DEMORALIZATION HOPLESSNESS
CONSTELLATION
129Case material case 1
- David, aged 18, came from a family with a
distinguished military background. He appeared to
have had a poor self image during his school
years, with intermittent periods of depression,
insomnia, and weight loss. - David really looked forward to his army service,
hoping that success there would redeem his low
self esteem. He applied to join an elite commando
unit but was turned down by the unit
psychologist. However, after advanced training
David was posted to a combat unit. He seemed to
do well but complained to his parents of being
unable to cope. His parents alerted the unit
mental health officer, who interviewed David.
During the examination David denied experiencing
any depression or suicidal thoughts, but David
was reassigned. The reassignment made David feel
like a failure soon thereafter he fatally shot
himself.
130Case material case 2 (The case of Ellen West)
- Ellen West was the daughter of wealthy Jewish
parents who had great control over her. Her
father interfered twice when she became engaged,
and when she finally married it was to a cousin. - From age 19 she developed the fear of becoming
fat and by 21 had developed Anorexia Nervosa. She
was hospitalized but this only increased her
suicidal thoughts. She was discharged from the
sanatorium at the request of her family. - On the third day after returning home she
appeared to be a changed person she ate and
enjoyed a walk with her husband. That evening she
took a lethal dose of poison.
131Types of Self-Harm
- Superficial self-injurious behavior (SIB) such as
self-cutting, scraping, burning (associated with
Cluster B personality disorders, eating
disorders, stress disorders) - Repetitive Stereotypical Behavior such as head
banging and self biting (associated with
intellectual disability, e.g. MR, autism) - Major self mutilation such as self blinding and
castration (rare occurs in psychotic disorders
and substance intoxication) Harris, JC, 2005
132 SIB as a stress related disorder
- Common in laboratory animals, and domestic
animals under stress, neglect, or isolation - Acral lick syndrome in dogs, feather plucking in
birds, self-biting in rhesus monkeys - Prevalence in normal human development
- 3.6 to 6.5 head banging rate at 8-36 months
associated with teething, ear infections.
Generally terminates by 36 mos. Harris, JC
(2005) - 15 head banging rate at 9-18 mos.
- (Hammock et al, 1995)
133Prevalence of SIB
- Among patients with eating disorders, 34.6 had a
life-time rate of SIB (N376). (Paul et al, 2002) - Community samples in the U.S. vary in estimates
from 4 to 38 of adolescents. - Canadian study found 13.9 of urban and suburban
high school students had self-injured (Ross
Heath, 2002). - A British report noted a 65 increase in SIB
disclosures to national childrens hotlines from
1999 to 2004.
134Distinguishing SIB from Suicidal Behavior
- Suicidal behavior is distinct from SIB in terms
of motivation, intent, and lethality. - Suicidal behavior is accompanied by some degree
of wish to die and intent to die i.e. the
patient believes that the behavior will possibly,
or will definitely, result in death. - Carefully assess motivations (to die, to escape,
to influence someone, to communicate feelings, to
relieve emotional distress, and intent (what was
the expected outcome of the behavior?)
135Suicide Continuum
Passive Death Wish
Suicidal Ideation, no method
Suicidal Ideation with method
Attempt
Completion
Gesture
136Assessing Current Safety
- Assess the presence or absence of suicidality and
the degree of severity (frequency, intensity,
duration) over the past 48 hours or since last
visit. - Negotiate No-Suicide/No Harm Safety Plan.
- Collaborate and review this plan with family.
- If family conflict is a common precipitant to
suicidality or self harm, help teen and family
negotiate a truce.
137Formulating the Safety Plan
- A collaborative process
- Includes the phone numbers of trusted adults,
therapist, 24-hour emergency coverage - Includes a set of coping strategies (written card
containing specific emotion regulation skills,
relaxation skills, social supports, coping
statements, hope kit) - A promise between teen, parents and therapist,
that teen will contact a responsible adult or
therapist before acting on suicidal impulses
138Contract and Commitment Phase
- Establishing a commitment to treatment from
both teen and family - ___agrees to do whatever it takes to say alive
during the period of this contract. This
contract lasts from __ to__
139Contract and Commitment Phase (continued)
- Priorities for intervention are as follows
- I. Decreasing life threatening behaviors
- cutting, overdosing, any tissue damage or other
life threatening behavior - II. Decreasing therapy interfering behaviors
(any behavior that makes therapy less likely to
occur) - Refusing to bring in or get rid of razors or
other dangerous objects - Any other therapy interfering behaviors
140Patient Agreements
- Stay in therapy for the specified time.
- Attend scheduled therapy sessions.
- Work toward reducing suicidal behaviors/self-injur
ious behaviors as a goal of therapy. - Work on problems that arise that interfere with
progress in therapy.
141Therapist Agreements
- Make every reasonable effort to conduct competent
and effective therapy. - Obey standard ethical and professional
guidelines. - Be available for weekly therapy sessions, phone
consultations, and provide needed therapy back-
up when on vacation or away. - Respect the integrity of and rights of the
patient. - Maintain confidentiality.
- Obtain consultation when needed.
142Negotiating Treatment Contract
- Initially patients with history of self-cutting
may not be able to agree to abstain entirely from
SIB. - Explore teens concerns about their SIB and
negative consequences of the behavior to increase
motivation for change. (remain non-judgemental.) - Negotiate with teen to try specific emotion
regulation strategies first, and to delay cutting
for longer periods after the urge begins. - Negotiate with teen to avoid triggers for
self-injury.
143Understanding Self-injurious Behavior
- SIB is identified by the patient as non-suicidal,
and is typically aimed at relieving distress. It
is marked by - An irresistible impulse to self-harm
- Mounting agitation no escape from tension
- Cognitive constriction- no alternatives
considered - Rapid, temporary relief following the act of self
injury
144Functions Self-injury may Serve
- Escape or reduce painful emotions
- Distract from painful memories or thoughts
- Self-expression of emotions
- Punishment of self
- Tension reduction/Anger reduction
- Get attention, social support, or help
- To feel alive
145Characteristics of Self-injurers
- The teen may have difficulties
- Labeling their emotions
- Effectively regulating emotions
- Trusting experiences as valid responses to events
(therefore individual searches environment for
cues about how to respond) - Tolerating distress
- Effectively solving problems (Miller, 1999)
146Emotional Vulnerability
- High sensitivity
- Immediate reactions
- Low threshold for emotional reaction
- High reactivity
- Extreme reactions
- High arousal dysregulates cognitive processing
- Slow return to baseline
- Long lasting reactions
- Creates high sensitivity to next emotional
stimulus
147Borderline Personality Disorder
- Many self-injurers display some of these traits
- Emotion dysregulation (affect lability)
- Interpersonal dysregulation (chaotic
relationships) - Self-dysregulation (identity disturbance)
- Behavioral dysregulation (self-injury)
- Cognitive dysregulation (paranoia)
148What We See in the Teen
- Critical, hostile statements toward self and
feelings of guilt, shame, anger when experiencing
strong emotions - These reactions serve to intensify the pain of
the original emotion and further support the
self-critical backlash
149The Invalidating Environment
- Families may
- Indiscriminantly reject
- Punish emotional displays and intermittently
reinforce emotional escalation. - Over-simplify the ease of problem-solving and
meeting goals - Indiscriminantly indulge
150Creating a Validating Therapeutic Environment
- Therapist validates the emotional need behind the
behavior. - Therapist must non-judgmentally acknowledge
destructiveness of teens behavior. - Youre doing the best you can, and you can do
better. - Therapist refrains from criticizing the
individual but instead elicits negative
consequences about specific behaviors from teen.
151Levels of Validation (Miller Comtois, 2002)
- Unbiased listening and observing.
- Accurate reflection
- Articulating the unverbalized
- Validation in terms of past learning or
biological dysfunction - Validation in terms of present context
- Radical genuineness
152Break
- Time for a 15 minute break!
153Developing the Treatment Approach
- Protocol driven treatments (one size fits all,
what to do instructions) work with severe and
chronic Axis I problems - Principle-driven treatments (based on principles
that tell you how to figure out what to do) are
needed with multi-diagnostic and/or Axis II
patients -
Miller, 2002
154Chain analysis as a Guide to Case
Conceptualization
- A form of behavioral analysis
- Translation of the behavior problem (SIB) into
links in the chain of emotions, events,
behavior and consequences - Assessing at a micro-level to reconstruct the
sequence in time
155Chain Analysis as a Guide
- Start by asking teen to walk you through the
events that led up to the self-injury. - Help teen identify vulnerability factors that may
have contributed. - Ask teen to describe in detail the precipitants,
thoughts, images, and feelings they may have
experienced as well as what was going on
outside. - Ask about () and (-) consequences of the SIB.
156Links in the Chain
- Vulnerability factors
- Triggering event
- Emotions
- Thoughts (self-talk)
- Physical sensations
- Urges
- Behavior
- Consequences
157Forming Conceptualization
- The specific vulnerabilities, self-statements,
and feelings (internal factors), as well as the
triggering events and consequences of the SIB
(external factors), will help you to develop
the case conceptualization and treatment plan.
158(No Transcript)
159(No Transcript)
160Prioritize treatment needs
- Through chain analyses, the therapist decides
which skill areas to target first - Emotion regulation skills
- Cognitive restructuring
- Family Conflict
- Communication skills
- Problem-solving
- Social skills/assertiveness skills
161 LUNCH BREAK !
162Emotion Education
- Learning to be nonjudgmental toward self
- Teach teen how to observe and describe different
emotions, without labeling them as good or bad,
but simply to be aware of them. - Emotion dysregulation results often because teen
is overly harsh toward self for having strong
feelings, and may often judge specific feelings
as wrong, or invalid, and feel more distressing
emotions in turn.
163Emotion Education (continued)
- Action urges and choices
- A negative emotion often leads to an irresistible
urge to act in a self-destructive manner. - Important to teach teen that just because they
have urge to act on a distressing emotion they
are not obligated to act in this way. - Distinguish between urge to act and the
action itself.
164Reducing Vulnerability to Negative Emotion
- Parents and teens should be taught how to
decrease vulnerability to emotion mind
(Linehan, 1993). - Emphasis on importance of maintaining regular
sleep schedule. - Eating balanced diet, treating physical illness,
getting regular exercise, avoiding substance
abuse and planning at least one activity a day
that elicits a sense of competence and mastery.
165HEAR ME
- Health (treat physical illness)
- Exercise regularly
- Avoid mood altering drugs
- Rest (balanced sleep)
- Mastery (one rewarding activity daily)
- Eating (balanced diet)
166Emotions Thermometer
167Mindfulness of current emotion
- Steps in the process
- 1. Observe your emotion
- 2. Experience Your emotion
- 3. You are not your emotion
- 4. Practice Accepting your emotion
168Mindfulness
- 1. Observe your emotion
- Note its presence just observe it
- Step Back
- Get Unstuck from the emotion
169Mindfulness
- 2. Experience Your Emotion
- As a wave, coming and going
- Try not to block or suppress the emotion
- Dont try to get rid of the emotion
- Dont push it away
- Dont try to keep the emotion around
- Dont hold on to it
- Dont intensify it
170Mindfulness
- 3. Remember You are not your emotion
- Do not necessarily act on your emotion (that is,
let destructive action urges pass). - Remember times when you have felt different.
171Mindfulness
- 4. Practice accepting your emotion
- Do not judge your emotion as wrong, bad, too
painful, unfair, embarrassing, etc. - Do not criticize yourself for feeling the
emotion. - Accept your emotion as it is in the moment.
172Chain Analysis as an Intervention The Freeze
Frame Technique (Wexler, 1991)
- Takes the chain analysis a step further
- Recalls events as if reviewing a video replay and
then freezing the frame at critical points. - Helps teen to slow time down (especially useful
for teens who are impulsive and cant remember
what happened) .
173Steps of Freeze Frame
- To review
- Teen is asked to describe in detail a situation
in which he/she had a particularly strong
emotional reaction and/or had adverse
consequences. - These consequences should be both internal and
external e.g. teen punched his door consequence
might be he/she has to pay for a new door and
also feels guilty and ashamed of this behavior.
174Freeze Frame (continued)
- In addition to who, what, where, when of the
problem situation, sensory, interpersonal,
affective, cognitive details are also recalled
negative self-talk is especially important to
articulate. - The teen should describe the vulnerability
factors that made he/she more susceptible to
negative emotions and problem behavior.
175Freeze Frame (continued)
- The teen is instructed to slow time down as the
scene approaches the moment when the problem
emotion intensified or the uncontrollable
behavior started (analogy of the instant replay
can be used). - At the moment just prior to the problem emotion
or uncontrollable behavior is reached, the teen
is instructed to FREEZE THE FRAME and describe
thoughts, feelings, bodily sensations, and action
urges at that moment.
176Freeze Frame (continued)
- The next step is to ask the teen what NEEDS were
you attempting to meet through the behavior, even
if the results were negative? - Once these needs have been identified , the
therapist must help teen to develop self-respect
for these needs (teach teen to validate these
needs) and formulate alternative ways to take
care of these needs.
177Freeze Frame (continued)
- Needs-Important to teach teen that if they can
identify their needs and learn different
behaviors to get their needs met, they can have
more power. - Once you know the needs, you are smarter. Once
you have new tools for handling the needs, you
are more powerful (Wexler, 1993).
178Freeze Frame (continued)
- The Freeze Frame differs from the chain analysis,
and becomes an intervention with the final step - The teen replays the scene and replaces the
problem behavior with the new coping skills, and
then imagines a new outcome.
179Educating Family about Freeze Frame
- The Freeze Frame approach is the basis for
generating options and interventions with regard
to emotion dysregulation. - We can use this approach to examine emotion
dysregulation that occurs interpersonally between
family members.
180Break
- Time for a 15 minute break!
181Distress Tolerance Skills
- A crisis survival strategy
- Vital skill to teach teen as they will not always
be able to decrease painful emotions, or get what
they need interpersonally, so they will need to
learn how to tolerate distressing emotions.
182Distress Tolerance Skills
- Linehan (1993) Learning how to bear pain
skillfully - Teaching teens to suspend judgment an emotion
simply is - Teaching teens to accept painful feelings vs.
trying to get rid of them quickly
183Distress Tolerance Skills
- 3 Myths about acceptance (Miller, 1997)
- If you refuse to accept something, it will
magically change. - If you accept your painful situation, you will
become soft and just give up (or give in). - If you accept your painful situation, you are
accepting a life of pain.
184Distress Tolerance Skills
- CBT component of Distress Tolerance
- Acceptance self-talk
- Learning to talk to yourself nonjudgmentally e.g.
Im doing the best I can, I know if I can just
get through this difficult time things will get
better. - Acceptance self-talk counters the negative,
critical shoulds that often accompany painful
emotions.
185Distress Tolerance Skills
- Main emphasis is teaching teens how to soothe
themselves . - Teens may be resistant to this, as their relation
to the world is predominantly action and other
oriented. - Self-soothing skills involve neither action in
the external behavior sense nor an explicit
relation with others.
186Distress Tolerance Skills
- Some teens have belief that others should soothe
them when distressed and have difficulty
believing that they can depend on themselves. - Others may feel that they dont deserve to be
soothed and may feel guilty, ashamed, angry when
they try to self-soothe (Linehan, 1993) .
187Distress Tolerance Skills
- Some teens have belief that others should soothe
them when distressed and have difficulty
believing that they can depend on themselves. - Others may feel that they dont deserve to be
soothed and may feel guilty, ashamed, angry when
they try to self-soothe (Linehan, 1993) .
188Self-Soothing Throughthe Five Senses
- An accessible and easily taught
self-soothing/distress tolerance skill is the use
of the 5 senses - Vision, hearing, smell, taste, touch
- Usually at least 2-3 of the five senses are
engaged or capable of being engaged at any given
moment as a distraction from distress.
189Sensory Soothing (continued)
- Vision
- Focus on an aspect of nature, or any visual
detail - Hearing
- Music, nature sounds, relaxation tape, fan noise
- Smell
- Lotion, candle, perfume, favorite food cooking
- Taste
- Hot chocolate or tea, ice creamtaste slowly
- Touch
- Pet your dog, cat, soothing bath, hug, blanket
190Helping Parents Regulate Their Emotions When in
Conflict with Teen
- Teach trategies for changing the timing and
process of confrontations. - Important to educate parents that when teen
attacks and parent becomes dysregulated then
parent can no longer be effective in enforcing
rules and consequences. - Teens will escalate their behavior in an attempt
to control outcome of mood and outcome of the
interaction (Sells, 1998).
191Creating a Validating Family Environment
- Help both parents and teen to understand how
their reactions to each other may be
invalidating. - Kernel of Truth
- Coaching parents to become more aware of the ways
in which their communication may be overly
negative and critical. - Validation isnt agreeing with and doesnt have
to be warm and fuzzy.
192Strategies to Help Parents Respond Calmly
- Strategies to help parents respond calmly and
nonreactively to their teens provocations during
conflict - EXIT AND WAIT
- STAYING SHORT AND TO THE POINT, USING DEFLECTORS
193Communication Skills
- Active Listening (verbal and non verbal skills)
- Therapist models listening skills
- Sending clear messages ( use of I statements
instead of you - Practice/role play in session
194Changing Emotion by Acting Opposite the Current
Emotion
- Every emotion has an action associated with it.
- Fear Run
- Anger.. Attack
- Sadness..Withdraw
- Shame.Hide
195Changing Emotion by Acting Opposite the Current
Emotion
- Opposite Action
- Emotion is strongly influenced by our bodily
posture and facial expressions. - By altering posture, behavior and facial
expressions we can delay, interrupt or
de-escalate the progression of a problematic
emotion.
196Opposite Action for Anger
- Keep ones palms open when inclined to punch.
- Whisper when inclined to scream.
- Breath deeply and slowly rather than angrily
hyperventilating. - Gently avoid the person you are angry with rather
than attacking. - Put yourself in the other persons shoes, and
imagine sympathy or empathy for the person,
rather than blame.
197Opposite Action for Guilt or Shame
- Repair the mistake.
- Say youre sorry
- Make up for what you did to the person you
offended - Try to avoid making the same mistake in the
future. - Accept the consequences for what you did.
- Then let it go.
198Opposite action for Sadness or Depression
- Get active
- Approach, dont avoid
- Do things that make you feel effective and
self-confident - Use the half-smile
199Opposite Action for Envy
- Someone else has something that you think you
WANT or NEED. (If you cant have it, they
SHOULDNT.) - Based on a fundamental belief that you are
DEPRIVED. - Radical Acceptance you have to radically accept
that you dont have it (opposite action).
200- Radical Self-Acceptance
-
- We must willingly accept all aspects of self.
Remember that acceptance does not necessarily
mean approval or agreement, but is simply the
acknowledgement of what is. Accepting that you
are human, that you have both failings and
accomplishments