Tag: Bommersbach

Reading of the Week: Suicide – with Papers from AJP and BJPsych Int; Also, O’Brien on His Brother’s Suicide & His Family

From the Editor

She came into our ED feeling overwhelmed. After a recent breakup, she felt suicidal; the academic demands of grade 12 further stressed her. As a clinician, this type of adolescent presentation seems to be increasingly common.

But is it? Many people have opinions. Dr. Tanner J. Bommersbach (of the University of Wisconsin) and his co-authors attempt to shed light on the state of teen mental health with a new and important paper focused on suicidal ideation, plans, and attempts. In the first selection, we examine their American Journal of Psychiatry paper, involving almost 120 000 high school students, drawing on US survey data, and covering a decade and a half. “In this nationally representative sample… significant increases occurred in the percentage reporting past-year suicidal thoughts, suicide plans, and suicide attempts from 2007 to 2021.” We consider the paper and its implications.

In the second selection from BJPsych International, Dr. Rachel Gibbons (of the Royal College of Psychiatrists) writes about suicide. In a controversial paper, she argues that we make too many assumptions about suicide, which colour our research and undermine our understanding of patients. “Embracing the complexity of suicide may not only refine prevention but also deepen our understanding of suffering, resilience, and meaning.”

And in the third selection, playwright Dan O’Brien writes about his brother’s suicide for Esquire. In a deeply personal essay, he discusses his brother’s mental health problems and his parents’ desire to hide them. He wonders what could have been. “I would like to be helpful to some who might read this, if only to deny that the suffering of mental illness is a disgrace, and to assert that such suffering is common and survivable.”

DG

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Reading of the Week: ED Visits & Suicide Attempts – the New AJP Study; Also, Smoking Cessation, and Pappas on Her Genes & Her Olympic Drive

From the Editor

Are ED visits for suicide attempts becoming more frequent? What are the implications for care?

In the first selection from The American Journal of Psychiatry, Dr. Tanner J. Bommersbach (of the Mayo Clinic) and his co-authors attempt to answer these questions by considering US trends in ED visits for suicide attempts and intentional self-harm. Using national survey data collected over a 10-year period, they estimate that the absolute number of suicide attempts tripled to 5.3 million. “A significant national increase in emergency department visits for suicide attempts and intentional self-harm occurred from 2011 to 2020, as a proportion of total emergency department visits and as visits per capita.” We analyze this study.

In the second selection, Drs. Robert A. Kleinman (of the University of Toronto) and Brian S. Barnett (of the Cleveland Clinic) write about smoking cessation and mental illness in a Viewpoint just published in JAMA Psychiatry. They note societal progress – smoking rates are sharply down over the past five decades – yet many with mental illness still use tobacco. They argue that psychiatrists have a significant role to play in addressing this problem. “Patients who stop smoking can limit tobacco-related illness, avoid the distressing effects of nicotine withdrawal and craving, and live longer.”

Later this week, the Olympics conclude in Paris. In the third selection, former Olympian Alexi Pappas discusses her mother’s suicide and her own struggles with depression. In a deeply personal essay from The New York Times, she contemplates genes and destiny and healing. “My future – the universe where my fear lives – was never set in stone, and neither was my mom’s. I’m more than my genes, and I would not reroll the dice if given the option.”

There will be no Readings for the next two weeks.

DG

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