Publication | Closed Access
A Randomized Controlled Trial of Postcrisis Suicide Prevention
514
Citations
8
References
2001
Year
The study tested whether sustained professional contact with high‑risk individuals who refuse ongoing care reduces suicide risk. Randomized 843 patients refusing care into a contact group receiving quarterly letters for five years versus a no‑contact control, with follow‑up over fifteen years. Contact reduced suicide rates for up to two years, with a significant survival benefit in the first two years that diminished thereafter.
This study tested the hypothesis that professionals' maintenance of long-term contact with persons who are at risk of suicide can exert a suicide-prevention influence. This influence was hypothesized to result from the development of a feeling of connectedness and to be most pertinent to high-risk individuals who refuse to remain in the health care system.A total of 3,005 persons hospitalized because of a depressive or suicidal state, populations known to be at risk of subsequent suicide, were contacted 30 days after discharge about follow-up treatment. A total of 843 patients who had refused ongoing care were randomly divided into two groups; persons in one group were contacted by letter at least four times a year for five years. The other group-the control group-received no further contact. A follow-up procedure identified patients who died during the five-year contact period and during the subsequent ten years. Suicide rates in the contact and no-contact groups were compared.Patients in the contact group had a lower suicide rate in all five years of the study. Formal survival analyses revealed a significantly lower rate in the contact group (p=.04) for the first two years; differences in the rates gradually diminished, and by year 14 no differences between groups were observed.A systematic program of contact with persons who are at risk of suicide and who refuse to remain in the health care system appears to exert a significant preventive influence for at least two years. Diminution of the frequency of contact and discontinuation of contact appear to reduce and eventually eliminate this preventive influence.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1