Kimberly A. Van Orden, April Buttaccio, Yeates Conwell
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The 5D indicators of suicide risk in older adults who are lonely
Loneliness is associated with suicide ideation, attempts, and deaths in later life. The objective of this study is to describe characteristics of suicide risk among older adults who report clinically significant loneliness grounded in our conceptual model of the 5Ds of late life suicide. Our sample comprises 291 adults aged 60 years and older who screened positive for loneliness (UCLA 3‐Item Loneliness Scale score of 6 and above) and subsequently completed baseline eligibility interviews for a clinical trial. Interviews obtained information on loneliness severity, suicide ideation, and the 5Ds of late life suicide: (1) depression (PROMIS depression), (2) deadly means (firearms access), (3) disease (number of chronic conditions), (4) disconnection (objective disconnection, Lubben Social Network Scale; subjective disconnection, UCLA Loneliness Scale), and (5) disability (World Health Organization Disability Assessment Schedule). Subjects demonstrated a high frequency of characteristics associated with suicide risk, with the most common presentation (38%) being the presence of 3Ds—subjective disconnection (loneliness), multimorbidity, and disability. While few subjects presented with only subjective disconnection (loneliness), there was diversity in which other Ds were present and in which combination, suggesting heterogeneous presentations. Upstream suicide prevention efforts could target older adults with loneliness to reach a population with numerous compounding indicators of risk.
期刊介绍:
Published on behalf of the New York Academy of Sciences, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences provides multidisciplinary perspectives on research of current scientific interest with far-reaching implications for the wider scientific community and society at large. Each special issue assembles the best thinking of key contributors to a field of investigation at a time when emerging developments offer the promise of new insight. Individually themed, Annals special issues stimulate new ways to think about science by providing a neutral forum for discourse—within and across many institutions and fields.