Home
Shopping Cart
Contact Us
IRBD.ORG
EUBF.ORG
All Enquiries:: +44 (0)20 8487 1421  
  Search:      Advanced search
 
Printable version 
 
     Categories
Journal - Volume 3
Journal - Volume 2
Journal - Volume 1
FREE Articles
Short Communications
Subscriptions


     Help
Contact us
Privacy statement
Terms & Conditions
Editorial Board
Company Info

  ASPOFAFF :: Journal - Volume 3 :: Volume 3 - Issue 1 - Articles :: Vol 3 - Iss 1 - Article - Personality traits of subjects attempting suicide: results of the Zurich Study.

  Vol 3 - Iss 1 - Article - Personality traits of subjects attempting suicide: results of the Zurich Study. #95
Vol 3 - Iss 1 - Article - Personality traits of subjects attempting suicide: results of the Zurich Study. 


Suicide attempts 18
23.7.07
Manuscript for Aspects of Affect
3379 words






Personality traits of subjects attempting suicide: results of the Zurich Study.




Jules Angst, Alex Gamma, Vladeta Ajdacic-Gross and Wulf Rössler.

Zurich University Psychiatric Hospital
Lenggstrasse 31,
P.O. Box 1931,
CH-8032 Zurich, Switzerland
TEL: ++41 1 384-2611; FAX: +41 1 384-2446
email: jangst@bli.uzh.ch






Abstract

Objectives: to compare the personality characteristics of suicide attempters with non-attempters, first in the whole sample and then among subjects with major depressive episoded (MDE)
Method: a representative cohort of the population was studied over 20 years from age 20/21 to 40/41 by six interviews and the Symptom Checklist SCL-90 R for self-assessment. Suicidality was assessed in an independent interview section. MDE was diagnosed by DSM-III-R criteria.
Results: The weighted lifetime prevalence for suicide attempts was 6.3% (women 7.7%, men 4.9%). 50 of 72 (69%) subjects attempting suicide were diagnosed with MDE and another 18% with minor affective disorders. But only 23.8% of 101 major depressives and only 28.1% of bipolar-II subjects attempted suicide. Compared to others, subjects attempting suicide were in their personality often depressed, with low self-esteem and mastery and high neuroticism scores. In addition they were more irritable/impulsive and aggressive towards others and manifested more conduct problems at school age and higher rates of antisocial personality disorders. Among subjects with MDE most of these findings were replicated, but the differences to non-suicidal subjects were smaller than to controls.
Conclusions: The majority of depressives do not attempt suicide. About 25% of subjects suffering from depression had attempted suicide by the age of 40. These subjects were characterised by a combination of externalising (impulsivity, aggression, conduct problems) and internalising characteristics (depressive personality, high neuroticism, poor coping skills and low self-esteem).

Key words: suicide attempts, personality, major depressive episodes, epidemiology

Details
 
Price: €10.00

Options
 
Quantity 1 (this product is downloadable)

 Add to cart 
        

 

  Send to friend
Your name: *
Your e-mail: *
Recipient's e-mail: *

 Send to friend 
 

 

 
     Your cart
Cart is empty

View cart
Checkout


     Authentication
Username

Password

Log in
Register
Recover password

If Javascript is disabled in your browser click here




 

  Powered by X-Cart: shopping cart software Copyright © 2005-2008 ASPOFAFF