Transdiagnostic suicidality in depression: More similar than different?

IF 5.3 2区 医学 Q1 PSYCHIATRY
Simina Toma, Mark Sinyor, Rachel H. B. Mitchell, Ayal Schaffer
{"title":"Transdiagnostic suicidality in depression: More similar than different?","authors":"Simina Toma,&nbsp;Mark Sinyor,&nbsp;Rachel H. B. Mitchell,&nbsp;Ayal Schaffer","doi":"10.1111/acps.13600","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>While extensive work has been conducted regarding risk factors for suicide attempts and deaths, clinical prediction of suicide-related behaviour at an individual level remains an unmet challenge.<span><sup>1</sup></span> Given this reality, some have recommended a shift from risk prediction to risk management and a focus on formulation and therapeutic engagement.<span><sup>2</sup></span> There is a paucity of prospective data directly comparing suicidal behaviour across commonly encountered psychiatric conditions and their symptom severity. Major depressive disorder (MDD), bipolar disorder (BD) and borderline personality disorder (BPD) are known to be associated with higher risk for suicidal ideation, suicide attempt and death by suicide than the general population, especially during the course of major depressive episodes (MDEs).<span><sup>3</sup></span> Mood disorders and BPD also frequently co-occur, with about 20% of adults with BD having comorbid BPD and an even higher frequency of BPD traits.<span><sup>4, 5</sup></span> The dynamic interplay between depressive symptom fluctuation, baseline BPD traits and emergence of suicidal behaviour is of great clinical relevance.</p><p>In this edition of the journal, Isometsä et al. examine suicide attempts and suicidal ideation prospectively in a cohort of outpatients with an MDE within the context of MDD, BD or comorbid with BPD.<span><sup>6</sup></span> Findings include higher rates of suicide attempts in those with BPD, a correlation between suicide attempts/suicidal ideation and BPD symptom severity as measured by the borderline personality disorder severity index (BPDSI) at baseline, and a correlation between severity of suicidal ideation and depressive symptom severity. Although the rates of suicidal ideation and attempts are lower over the period of follow up in the BD group than in the other two groups, the link between depression severity changes and suicidality is greater in this group. Hopelessness is found to be a transdiagnostic predictor of suicidal ideation. Interestingly, non-suicidal self-injury (NSSI) is also high in the MDD group, and not only in the BPD group. NSSI is lower in the BD group.</p><p>This work provides an important contribution to the field based on the prospective design and direct comparison of uniform and relevant outcomes between these three commonly encountered clinical groups. The sample is comprised of treatment-seeking subjects in an outpatient clinic, with on average moderate depression severity at baseline. While the strictly outpatient setting may reduce generalizability to other settings, the outpatient setting is particularly salient as past work has demonstrated the most common mental health contact prior to suicide completion is an ambulatory care visit, rather than emergency room visit or psychiatric hospitalisation.<span><sup>7</sup></span> Furthermore, the rate of lifetime suicide attempts in this group is 15.6% for the MDD group, 30% for the BD group and 60% for the BPD group, which suggests generalizability to most clinical populations.<span><sup>8</sup></span> The authors also highlight several limitations including the amalgamation of suicidal thoughts and thoughts of self-harm within the suicidal ideation measure. The lethality degree of the suicide attempts reported is also unknown and is obtained by self-report.</p><p>The Isometsä et al. study supports findings from prior studies which demonstrated that BPD features are correlated with higher suicidal ideation in those with mood disorders, and that depressive symptom severity and hopelessness are associated with suicidal ideation in those with BPD.<span><sup>9, 10</sup></span> The dynamic mapping of suicidal ideation and depressive symptom severity over time, particularly hopelessness, is of great interest. The authors note that the choice of a 6-month prospective period links with the mean duration and remission of an MDE. A prospective study as part of the Systematic Treatment Enhancement Program for Bipolar Disorder trial (STEP-BD) also found an increase in suicidal ideation and depressive symptoms, mainly depressed mood and anhedonia, prior to a suicide attempt.<span><sup>11</sup></span> A prospective study in MDD showed a decline in depressive symptoms preceding a decline in SI, with a median period of around 2 months for SI resolution.<span><sup>12</sup></span> The exact duration and trajectory of the acute period of crisis and increased risk may be difficult to ascertain at an individual level given the known fluctuation of suicidality. The correlation between changes in specific depressive symptoms and suicidality versus absolute severity of depressive symptoms would also warrant further study, especially as Isometsä et al. report that the magnitude of this change in severity of overall depressive symptoms may be more closely related to suicidal ideation shifts within BD. This may relate to a closer link between depression and suicidality in BD due to hopelessness in the context of a chronic illness. Alternatively, other factors may more strongly mitigate the relationship between depression and suicidality in those with non-BD MDE.</p><p>Given that suicide is a rare event when measured over relatively short durations, suicide attempts and measures of suicidal ideation and self-harm may be reasonable proxies to understand death by suicide, although the relationship is not a direct one. Transdiagnostic studies have identified past suicide attempts as among the most important risk factors for future attempts and eventual suicide death.<span><sup>13</sup></span> This may vary by disorder and as a function of comorbidities. Chronic suicidal ideation and recurrent self-harm are core features of BPD. Self-harm may also predispose to further suicidal behaviour by enhancing readiness for suicide due to factors such as tolerance for physical pain.<span><sup>14</sup></span> Most patients with BPD have, on average, three lifetime suicide attempts, and the lifetime risk of death by suicide is estimated at 5%–10%.<span><sup>15</sup></span> Previous BPD studies did not find a correlation between number of past suicide attempts and death by suicide, and identified that other factors such as impulsivity, hostility and comorbidities play prominent roles.<span><sup>16</sup></span> It is also plausible that the combination of BPD and depression may alter the relationship between suicide attempts and completion. In BD, comorbid BPD was associated with suicide attempts, but not with suicide completion.<span><sup>17</sup></span></p><p>The cumulative effect of longer periods of elevated suicidal ideation and suicidal behaviour in those with mood disorders with comorbid BPD or BPD traits may also contribute to hopelessness about the future and a sense of entrapment in the current pain. This course of illness contrasts significantly with that of individuals with intermittent mood episodes and inter-episode periods of symptomatic and perhaps even functional recovery. In addition, it is hypothesised that patients with BPD are at higher risk of death by suicide later in the course of illness while being at higher risk for suicide attempts and frequent self-harm earlier in the course of illness.<span><sup>18</sup></span> This speaks to the importance of hopelessness as a driver of suicidal behaviour, which is further highlighted by the findings from the Isometsä et al. study.</p><p>What are salient points for clinicians to consider from this extant literature? First, among patients presenting with an MDE, clinicians should consider screening for BPD and rating BPD symptom severity, even in those with only borderline personality traits. Exploring symptoms more typically associated with BPD such as impulsivity, self-harm and interpersonal instability in those with mood disorders may further help in understanding the drivers of a patient's suicidal behaviour. Given that the present study also found increased rates of NSSI in MDE without BPD, screening for self-harm in this population may be warranted. Furthermore, patients with mood disorders may benefit from interventions aimed at BPD symptoms such as enhancing coping skills, impulsivity management and work towards stable connections and relatedness to others. These may in turn modify risk for suicidal behaviour.</p><p>Conversely, clinicians should focus on assessing closely those with BPD for the presence of a depressive episode. Indeed, clinicians may often focus on BPD symptoms in those with a history of the diagnosis given the inherent externalising nature of BPD symptoms. Patients with BPD often present with recurrent suicide attempts or ideation, and identification of increased risk for suicide beyond the chronic elevated risk may prove particularly daunting. In addition, it can often be challenging to identify an MDE cross-sectionally in patients with severe BPD due overlapping symptoms of psychological pain, distress, and suicidal ideation. Longitudinal assessments using depression rating scales and prospective mood rating in the outpatient clinical, as done by Isometsä et al. could be of great benefit.</p><p>Ultimately, the goals of clinical encounters with suicidal patients are to understand the patient's unique vulnerabilities to suicidal behaviour, instil a sense of hope and connection, and co-create a management plan. By prospectively linking suicidal ideation and attempts during depressive episodes to BPD symptom severity, fluctuation of depression severity and hopelessness, Isometsä et al. eloquently confirm the importance of a multidimensional and transdiagnostic assessment of our patients.</p><p>Dr. Toma reported salary support from the Sunnybrook Foundation. Dr. Mitchell reported receiving grants from the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention, the TD Pooler Fund, and the Sunnybrook Foundation, and an Academic Scholar Award from the Department of Psychiatry at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre and the University of Toronto, and an honourarium from Medscape outside of the submitted work. Dr. Sinyor reported salary support through an Academic Scholar Award from the Departments of Psychiatry at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre and the University of Toronto. Dr. Schaffer reported salary support through an Academic Scholar Award from the Departments of Psychiatry at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre and the University of Toronto.</p>","PeriodicalId":108,"journal":{"name":"Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica","volume":"148 3","pages":"219-221"},"PeriodicalIF":5.3000,"publicationDate":"2023-08-22","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/acps.13600","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica","FirstCategoryId":"3","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/acps.13600","RegionNum":2,"RegionCategory":"医学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"PSYCHIATRY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

Abstract

While extensive work has been conducted regarding risk factors for suicide attempts and deaths, clinical prediction of suicide-related behaviour at an individual level remains an unmet challenge.1 Given this reality, some have recommended a shift from risk prediction to risk management and a focus on formulation and therapeutic engagement.2 There is a paucity of prospective data directly comparing suicidal behaviour across commonly encountered psychiatric conditions and their symptom severity. Major depressive disorder (MDD), bipolar disorder (BD) and borderline personality disorder (BPD) are known to be associated with higher risk for suicidal ideation, suicide attempt and death by suicide than the general population, especially during the course of major depressive episodes (MDEs).3 Mood disorders and BPD also frequently co-occur, with about 20% of adults with BD having comorbid BPD and an even higher frequency of BPD traits.4, 5 The dynamic interplay between depressive symptom fluctuation, baseline BPD traits and emergence of suicidal behaviour is of great clinical relevance.

In this edition of the journal, Isometsä et al. examine suicide attempts and suicidal ideation prospectively in a cohort of outpatients with an MDE within the context of MDD, BD or comorbid with BPD.6 Findings include higher rates of suicide attempts in those with BPD, a correlation between suicide attempts/suicidal ideation and BPD symptom severity as measured by the borderline personality disorder severity index (BPDSI) at baseline, and a correlation between severity of suicidal ideation and depressive symptom severity. Although the rates of suicidal ideation and attempts are lower over the period of follow up in the BD group than in the other two groups, the link between depression severity changes and suicidality is greater in this group. Hopelessness is found to be a transdiagnostic predictor of suicidal ideation. Interestingly, non-suicidal self-injury (NSSI) is also high in the MDD group, and not only in the BPD group. NSSI is lower in the BD group.

This work provides an important contribution to the field based on the prospective design and direct comparison of uniform and relevant outcomes between these three commonly encountered clinical groups. The sample is comprised of treatment-seeking subjects in an outpatient clinic, with on average moderate depression severity at baseline. While the strictly outpatient setting may reduce generalizability to other settings, the outpatient setting is particularly salient as past work has demonstrated the most common mental health contact prior to suicide completion is an ambulatory care visit, rather than emergency room visit or psychiatric hospitalisation.7 Furthermore, the rate of lifetime suicide attempts in this group is 15.6% for the MDD group, 30% for the BD group and 60% for the BPD group, which suggests generalizability to most clinical populations.8 The authors also highlight several limitations including the amalgamation of suicidal thoughts and thoughts of self-harm within the suicidal ideation measure. The lethality degree of the suicide attempts reported is also unknown and is obtained by self-report.

The Isometsä et al. study supports findings from prior studies which demonstrated that BPD features are correlated with higher suicidal ideation in those with mood disorders, and that depressive symptom severity and hopelessness are associated with suicidal ideation in those with BPD.9, 10 The dynamic mapping of suicidal ideation and depressive symptom severity over time, particularly hopelessness, is of great interest. The authors note that the choice of a 6-month prospective period links with the mean duration and remission of an MDE. A prospective study as part of the Systematic Treatment Enhancement Program for Bipolar Disorder trial (STEP-BD) also found an increase in suicidal ideation and depressive symptoms, mainly depressed mood and anhedonia, prior to a suicide attempt.11 A prospective study in MDD showed a decline in depressive symptoms preceding a decline in SI, with a median period of around 2 months for SI resolution.12 The exact duration and trajectory of the acute period of crisis and increased risk may be difficult to ascertain at an individual level given the known fluctuation of suicidality. The correlation between changes in specific depressive symptoms and suicidality versus absolute severity of depressive symptoms would also warrant further study, especially as Isometsä et al. report that the magnitude of this change in severity of overall depressive symptoms may be more closely related to suicidal ideation shifts within BD. This may relate to a closer link between depression and suicidality in BD due to hopelessness in the context of a chronic illness. Alternatively, other factors may more strongly mitigate the relationship between depression and suicidality in those with non-BD MDE.

Given that suicide is a rare event when measured over relatively short durations, suicide attempts and measures of suicidal ideation and self-harm may be reasonable proxies to understand death by suicide, although the relationship is not a direct one. Transdiagnostic studies have identified past suicide attempts as among the most important risk factors for future attempts and eventual suicide death.13 This may vary by disorder and as a function of comorbidities. Chronic suicidal ideation and recurrent self-harm are core features of BPD. Self-harm may also predispose to further suicidal behaviour by enhancing readiness for suicide due to factors such as tolerance for physical pain.14 Most patients with BPD have, on average, three lifetime suicide attempts, and the lifetime risk of death by suicide is estimated at 5%–10%.15 Previous BPD studies did not find a correlation between number of past suicide attempts and death by suicide, and identified that other factors such as impulsivity, hostility and comorbidities play prominent roles.16 It is also plausible that the combination of BPD and depression may alter the relationship between suicide attempts and completion. In BD, comorbid BPD was associated with suicide attempts, but not with suicide completion.17

The cumulative effect of longer periods of elevated suicidal ideation and suicidal behaviour in those with mood disorders with comorbid BPD or BPD traits may also contribute to hopelessness about the future and a sense of entrapment in the current pain. This course of illness contrasts significantly with that of individuals with intermittent mood episodes and inter-episode periods of symptomatic and perhaps even functional recovery. In addition, it is hypothesised that patients with BPD are at higher risk of death by suicide later in the course of illness while being at higher risk for suicide attempts and frequent self-harm earlier in the course of illness.18 This speaks to the importance of hopelessness as a driver of suicidal behaviour, which is further highlighted by the findings from the Isometsä et al. study.

What are salient points for clinicians to consider from this extant literature? First, among patients presenting with an MDE, clinicians should consider screening for BPD and rating BPD symptom severity, even in those with only borderline personality traits. Exploring symptoms more typically associated with BPD such as impulsivity, self-harm and interpersonal instability in those with mood disorders may further help in understanding the drivers of a patient's suicidal behaviour. Given that the present study also found increased rates of NSSI in MDE without BPD, screening for self-harm in this population may be warranted. Furthermore, patients with mood disorders may benefit from interventions aimed at BPD symptoms such as enhancing coping skills, impulsivity management and work towards stable connections and relatedness to others. These may in turn modify risk for suicidal behaviour.

Conversely, clinicians should focus on assessing closely those with BPD for the presence of a depressive episode. Indeed, clinicians may often focus on BPD symptoms in those with a history of the diagnosis given the inherent externalising nature of BPD symptoms. Patients with BPD often present with recurrent suicide attempts or ideation, and identification of increased risk for suicide beyond the chronic elevated risk may prove particularly daunting. In addition, it can often be challenging to identify an MDE cross-sectionally in patients with severe BPD due overlapping symptoms of psychological pain, distress, and suicidal ideation. Longitudinal assessments using depression rating scales and prospective mood rating in the outpatient clinical, as done by Isometsä et al. could be of great benefit.

Ultimately, the goals of clinical encounters with suicidal patients are to understand the patient's unique vulnerabilities to suicidal behaviour, instil a sense of hope and connection, and co-create a management plan. By prospectively linking suicidal ideation and attempts during depressive episodes to BPD symptom severity, fluctuation of depression severity and hopelessness, Isometsä et al. eloquently confirm the importance of a multidimensional and transdiagnostic assessment of our patients.

Dr. Toma reported salary support from the Sunnybrook Foundation. Dr. Mitchell reported receiving grants from the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention, the TD Pooler Fund, and the Sunnybrook Foundation, and an Academic Scholar Award from the Department of Psychiatry at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre and the University of Toronto, and an honourarium from Medscape outside of the submitted work. Dr. Sinyor reported salary support through an Academic Scholar Award from the Departments of Psychiatry at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre and the University of Toronto. Dr. Schaffer reported salary support through an Academic Scholar Award from the Departments of Psychiatry at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre and the University of Toronto.

抑郁症的跨诊断自杀:相似多于不同?
虽然对自杀企图和死亡的危险因素进行了广泛的研究,但在个人层面上对自杀相关行为的临床预测仍然是一个未解决的挑战鉴于这一现实,一些人建议从风险预测转向风险管理,并将重点放在配方和治疗参与上目前缺乏直接比较自杀行为与常见精神疾病及其症状严重程度的前瞻性数据。重度抑郁障碍(MDD)、双相情感障碍(BD)和边缘型人格障碍(BPD)与自杀意念、自杀企图和自杀死亡的风险比一般人群高,特别是在重度抑郁发作(MDEs)期间情绪障碍和BPD也经常同时发生,大约20%的成年双相障碍患者同时患有BPD,而BPD特征出现的频率更高。4,5抑郁症状波动、基线BPD特征和自杀行为出现之间的动态相互作用具有重要的临床意义。在这一期的杂志中,Isometsä等人对MDE门诊患者在重度抑郁症、双相障碍或BPD共病的背景下的自杀企图和自杀意念进行了前瞻性研究。研究结果包括BPD患者的自杀企图率更高,自杀企图/自杀意念与BPD症状严重程度之间的相关性(以基线边缘型人格障碍严重程度指数(BPDSI)衡量)。以及自杀意念的严重程度和抑郁症状的严重程度之间的关系。尽管在随访期间,双相障碍组的自杀意念和企图率比其他两组低,但在这一组中,抑郁严重程度的改变和自杀倾向之间的联系更大。绝望被发现是自杀意念的跨诊断预测因子。有趣的是,非自杀性自伤(NSSI)在重度抑郁症组中也很高,而不仅仅是在BPD组中。BD组自伤较低。这项工作为该领域提供了重要的贡献,基于前瞻性设计和直接比较这三个常见临床组之间统一和相关的结果。样本由在门诊就诊的寻求治疗的受试者组成,基线时平均抑郁严重程度为中度。虽然严格的门诊环境可能会降低对其他环境的概括性,但门诊环境尤其突出,因为过去的研究表明,自杀结束前最常见的精神健康接触是门诊护理,而不是急诊室或精神病院此外,重度抑郁症组的终生自杀企图率为15.6%,双相障碍组为30%,双相障碍组为60%,这表明大多数临床人群都有普遍性作者还强调了一些局限性,包括在自杀意念测量中合并自杀想法和自残想法。自杀企图的致命程度也是未知的,并通过自我报告获得。Isometsä等人的研究支持了先前的研究结果,这些研究表明,BPD特征与情绪障碍患者更高的自杀意念相关,抑郁症状的严重程度和绝望与BPD患者的自杀意念相关。自杀意念和抑郁症状严重程度随时间的动态映射,特别是绝望,是非常有趣的。作者指出,选择6个月的预期期与MDE的平均持续时间和缓解有关。一项前瞻性研究,作为双相情感障碍系统治疗增强计划试验(STEP-BD)的一部分,也发现自杀意念和抑郁症状增加,主要是抑郁情绪和快感缺乏,在自杀企图之前一项针对重度抑郁症的前瞻性研究显示,抑郁症状的减轻在SI下降之前,SI的缓解中位期约为2个月鉴于已知的自杀率波动,在个人层面上,危机急性期和风险增加的确切持续时间和轨迹可能难以确定。特定抑郁症状和自杀倾向的变化与抑郁症状的绝对严重程度之间的相关性也值得进一步研究,特别是Isometsä等人报道,总体抑郁症状严重程度的变化幅度可能与双相障碍患者的自杀意念转变更密切相关。这可能与慢性疾病背景下绝望导致的双相障碍患者抑郁和自杀倾向之间的更密切联系有关。或者,其他因素可能更强烈地减轻了非双相障碍MDE患者抑郁与自杀之间的关系。 考虑到自杀在相对较短的持续时间内是一个罕见的事件,自杀企图和自杀意念和自残的测量可能是理解自杀死亡的合理代理,尽管它们之间的关系不是直接的。跨诊断研究已经确定过去的自杀企图是未来自杀企图和最终自杀死亡的最重要的危险因素之一这可能因疾病和合并症的功能而异。慢性自杀意念和复发性自我伤害是BPD的核心特征。自残也可能由于诸如对身体疼痛的耐受性等因素而增强自杀准备,从而使进一步的自杀行为易于发生大多数BPD患者一生中平均有三次自杀企图,一生中自杀死亡的风险估计为5% - 10%先前的BPD研究没有发现过去自杀企图的数量与自杀死亡之间的相关性,并确定了其他因素,如冲动、敌意和合并症起着突出的作用BPD和抑郁症的结合也可能改变自杀企图和自杀完成之间的关系。在双相障碍中,共病性双相障碍与自杀企图有关,但与自杀完成无关。在伴有BPD或BPD特征的情绪障碍患者中,长期升高的自杀意念和自杀行为的累积效应也可能导致对未来的绝望和对当前痛苦的困住感。这一病程与间歇性情绪发作和发作间期症状甚至功能恢复的个体形成明显对比。此外,假设BPD患者在疾病后期自杀死亡的风险较高,而在疾病早期自杀未遂和频繁自残的风险较高这说明了绝望作为自杀行为驱动因素的重要性,Isometsä等人的研究结果进一步强调了这一点。从现存的文献中,临床医生需要考虑的突出点是什么?首先,在出现MDE的患者中,临床医生应该考虑BPD筛查和BPD症状严重程度评分,即使是那些只有边缘性人格特征的患者。探索与BPD相关的典型症状,如情绪障碍患者的冲动、自残和人际关系不稳定,可能有助于进一步了解患者自杀行为的驱动因素。鉴于本研究还发现无BPD的MDE患者自伤发生率增加,在这一人群中进行自我伤害筛查可能是有必要的。此外,情绪障碍患者可能受益于针对BPD症状的干预措施,如提高应对技能、冲动性管理和努力建立稳定的联系和与他人的关系。这些可能反过来降低自杀行为的风险。相反,临床医生应该密切关注BPD患者是否存在抑郁发作。事实上,鉴于BPD症状固有的外部性,临床医生可能经常关注那些有诊断史的BPD症状。BPD患者经常表现为复发性自杀企图或自杀意念,并且确定自杀风险增加超出慢性风险升高可能特别令人生畏。此外,由于心理疼痛、痛苦和自杀意念重叠的症状,在严重BPD患者中,横断面识别MDE往往具有挑战性。在门诊临床中使用抑郁评定量表和前瞻性情绪评定进行纵向评估,如Isometsä等人所做的,可能会有很大的好处。最终,临床接触自杀患者的目标是了解患者对自杀行为的独特脆弱性,灌输希望和联系感,并共同制定管理计划。通过前瞻性地将抑郁发作期间的自杀意念和企图与BPD症状严重程度、抑郁严重程度的波动和绝望联系起来,Isometsä等人雄辩地证实了对我们的患者进行多维和跨诊断评估的重要性。托马报告说,他得到了森尼布鲁克基金会(Sunnybrook Foundation)的工资支持。米切尔博士报告说,他获得了美国预防自杀基金会、TD Pooler基金和Sunnybrook基金会的资助,并获得了Sunnybrook健康科学中心和多伦多大学精神病学部门的学术学者奖,以及Medscape在提交工作之外的荣誉。Sinyor博士通过Sunnybrook健康科学中心和多伦多大学精神病学部门的学术学者奖报告了工资支持。博士。 据报道,Schaffer通过Sunnybrook健康科学中心和多伦多大学精神病学部门的学术学者奖获得了工资支持。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
求助全文
约1分钟内获得全文 求助全文
来源期刊
Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica
Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica 医学-精神病学
CiteScore
11.20
自引率
3.00%
发文量
135
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica acts as an international forum for the dissemination of information advancing the science and practice of psychiatry. In particular we focus on communicating frontline research to clinical psychiatrists and psychiatric researchers. Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica has traditionally been and remains a journal focusing predominantly on clinical psychiatry, but translational psychiatry is a topic of growing importance to our readers. Therefore, the journal welcomes submission of manuscripts based on both clinical- and more translational (e.g. preclinical and epidemiological) research. When preparing manuscripts based on translational studies for submission to Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica, the authors should place emphasis on the clinical significance of the research question and the findings. Manuscripts based solely on preclinical research (e.g. animal models) are normally not considered for publication in the Journal.
×
引用
GB/T 7714-2015
复制
MLA
复制
APA
复制
导出至
BibTeX EndNote RefMan NoteFirst NoteExpress
×
提示
您的信息不完整,为了账户安全,请先补充。
现在去补充
×
提示
您因"违规操作"
具体请查看互助需知
我知道了
×
提示
确定
请完成安全验证×
copy
已复制链接
快去分享给好友吧!
我知道了
右上角分享
点击右上角分享
0
联系我们:info@booksci.cn Book学术提供免费学术资源搜索服务,方便国内外学者检索中英文文献。致力于提供最便捷和优质的服务体验。 Copyright © 2023 布克学术 All rights reserved.
京ICP备2023020795号-1
ghs 京公网安备 11010802042870号
Book学术文献互助
Book学术文献互助群
群 号:481959085
Book学术官方微信