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Journal Article

Citation

Bartels SJ, Coakley E, Oxman TE, Constantino G, Oslin D, Chen H, Zubritsky C, Cheal K, Durai UNB, Gallo JJ, Llorente M, Sánchez H. Am. J. Geriatr. Psychiatry 2002; 10(4): 417-427.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2002, American Association for Geriatric Psychiatry, Publisher Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1097/00019442-200207000-00008

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

The authors identified correlates of active suicidal ideation andpassive death ideation in older primary care patients with depression, anxiety, and at-risk alcohol use. Participants included 2, 240 older primary care patients (age 65 +), who were identified in three mutually exclusive groups on the basis of responses to the Paykel suicide questions: No Ideation, Death Ideation, and Suicidal Ideation Chi-square, ANOVA, and polytomous logistic regression analyses were used to identify characteristics associated with suicidal ideation. The highest amount of suicidal ideation was associated with co-occurring major depression and anxiety disorder (18%), and the lowest proportion occurred in at-risk alcohol use (3%). Asians have the highest (57%) and African Americans have the lowest (27%) proportion of suicidal or death ideation. Fewer social supports and more severe symptoms were associated with greater overall ideation. Death ideation was associated with the greatest medical comorbidity and highest service utilization. Contrary to previous reports, authors failed to find that active suicidal ideation was associated with increased contacts with healthcare providers. Accordingly, targeted assessment and preventive services should be emphasized for geriatric outpatients with co-occurring depression and anxiety, social isolation, younger age, and Asian or Caucasian race.


Language: en

Keywords

adult; aged; aging; alcohol consumption; anxiety neurosis; article; chi square test; comorbidity; death; depression; female; health care utilization; high risk population; human; major clinical study; male; primary medical care; risk assessment; social isolation; suicide attempt

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