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Journal Article

Citation

Rössler W, Angst J, Ajdacic-Gross V, Haker H, Berrouiguet S, Ujeyl M, Glozier N, Hengartner MP. Front. Psychiatry 2018; 9(JUL).

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, Frontiers Media)

DOI

10.3389/fpsyt.2018.00320

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Study objectives: Associations between sleep problems and suicidality are increasingly acknowledged, but prospective data from well-controlled long-term community studies are lacking.

METHODS: We analyzed data from a longitudinal cohort study with n = 591 young adults from Zurich, Switzerland, prospectively followed from 1979 (age 20/21 years) to 2008 (age 49/50 years). Twelve-month prevalence of various mental disorders, socio-environmental confounders and sleep problems were carefully assessed with semi-structured interviews at 7 assessment waves spanning overall a 30-year observation period. Interviews were conducted with the "Structured Psychopathological Interview and Rating of the Social Consequences of Psychological Disturbances for Epidemiology" (SPIKE). The 12-month prevalence of sleep problems was graded according to frequency and associated distress of reported symptoms. 12-month prevalence of suicidality was classified as either mild (transient suicidal ideation) or severe (self-harm, suicide attempts).

RESULTS: Concurrently, and fully adjusted for several covariates, including mental disorders, relative to no sleep problems there was an odds ratio (OR) of OR = 1.9 (95% confidence interval 1.4-2.5), OR = 3.3 (2.5-4.4), and OR = 1.9 (1.3-2.8) for mild, moderate and severe sleep problems in association with suicidality. There was no evidence for a prospective effect of broad sleep problems on subsequent suicidality. Mild suicidality, but not severe suicidality, prospectively predicted subsequent broad sleep problems in the fully adjusted multivariate model (adjusted OR = 1.5; 1.1-1.9). Disturbed sleep initiation, a proxy for insomnia, significantly predicted subsequent suicidality (OR = 1.5; 1.1-1.9), whereas mild suicidality, but not severe suicidality, significantly predicted subsequent insomnia (OR = 1.5; 1.1-2.0).

CONCLUSIONS: Sleep problems and suicidality are longitudinally inter-related, which has important implications for clinical practice. Most importantly, the causal pathways appear to be bi-directional and independent of socio-demographics and concomitant mental disorders. More research is needed to examine the possible biopsychosocial etiological mechanisms linking suicidality to sleep problems. © 2018 Rössler, Angst, Ajdacic-Gross, Haker, Berrouiguet, Ujeyl, Glozier and Hengartner.


Language: en

Keywords

adult; human; Epidemiology; Sleep; Depression; suicide; female; male; insomnia; suicidal ideation; prevalence; Suicidality; suicide attempt; disease severity; Insomnia; longitudinal study; major clinical study; mental disease; controlled study; distress syndrome; automutilation; sleep disorder; social aspect; environmental factor; Switzerland; demography; cohort analysis; prospective study; Article; observational study; semi structured interview; young adult; community sample; Structured Psychopathological Interview and Rating of the Social Consequences of Psychological Disturbances for Epidemiology

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