Tag: family

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: Lived Experience of Postpartum Depression & Psychosis – the New World Psych Paper; Also, Involuntary Treatment and Family Stress

From the Editor

“You are normal and then the next thing, you know, you’re crazy.”

So comments a woman about her postpartum depression. Typically, we describe this illness with a list of symptoms. But how do patients experience it? In a new World Psychiatry paper, Dr. Paolo Fusar-Poli (of King’s College London) and his co-authors attempt to answer this question with a “bottom-up” approach, looking at both postpartum depression and psychosis. “To the best of our knowledge, this is the first bottom-up review of the lived experience of postpartum depression and psychosis. Experts by experience co-designed, co-conducted and co-wrote the study, leveraging an established methodological template developed by our group to investigate the lived experience of psychosis [and] depression…” We look at the paper and its implications.

Should people with substance problems be forced into treatment? Across North America, some are proposing this idea, including governments in British Columbia and Alberta. In a new Canadian Journal of Psychiatry paper, Benedikt Fischer (of the University of Toronto) and his co-authors look at the issue and the evidence. “Involuntary treatment for severe SUD is a complex and contentious concept that requires careful in-depth consideration before its adoption.”

In the third selection, a paper written anonymously for The BMJ, the author describes the challenges for families of those with severe mental disorders. He notes his deep frustration with visits to the ward, often leaving him in tears. “Perhaps family support needs to become part of the culture on mental health wards, and we should recognise the need for help in communicating.”

DG


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