Original Research December 1, 2001

Indicators of Suicide Over 10 Years in a Specialist Mood Disorders Unit Sample

Gemma L. Gladstone; Philip B. Mitchell; Gordon Parker; Kay Wilhelm; Marie-Paule Austin; Kerrie Eyers

J Clin Psychiatry 2001;62(12):945-951

Article Abstract

Background: There are few firm data to guide the clinician in identifying individual depressed patients who may be at high risk for completing suicide. In particular, there have been few prospective studies of well-characterized depressed patients to determine indicators of such future events.

Method: Eight hundred thirteen patients with a major depressive episode (DSM-III, DSM-III-R, or DSM-IV criteria) were assessed in detail in a specialist Mood Disorders Unit (MDU) over a 10-year period. Follow-up at the end of that period (mean = 5.1 years) confirmed that 31 patients (3.8%) had completed suicide. The suicide completers were compared on a broad range of clinical and demographic variables obtained at baseline with (1) the total remaining depressed sample, (2) 31 age- and sex-matched subjects who were confirmed to be alive and had never attempted suicide, and (3) 24 age- and sex-matched living subjects who had made at least 1 suicide attempt.

Results: The most consistent finding, across all 3 comparisons, was that the suicide completers were more likely to have been inpatients at the time of the index MDU assessment. Other characteristics of completers were a greater number of prior admissions for depression, being older and in a relationship, and being male and married or female and single. Somewhat paradoxically, suicide completers also evidenced fewer previous suicide attempts and less suicidal ideation compared with living subjects who had attempted suicide at the time of index assessment.

Conclusion: Overall, we were able to find few predictors of later suicide in this sample. Those who completed suicide demonstrated evidence of more severe illness over a lifetime (for example, having more admissions), but revealed less suicidal ideation at the time of the index MDU assessment. While these features were statistically significant, they are of limited usefulness in predicting suicide in an individual patient.