Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-jkksz Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-26T14:28:39.470Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Chapter 9 - On the Randomness of Suicide

An Evolutionary, Clinical Call to Transcend Suicide Risk Assessment

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 September 2022

Riadh Abed
Affiliation:
Mental Health Tribunals, Ministry of Justice, UK
Paul St John-Smith
Affiliation:
Hertfordshire Partnership University NHS Foundation Trust, UK
Get access

Summary

Converging theoretical and empirical evidence points to suicide being a fundamentally aleatory event – that risk of suicide is opaque to useful assessment at the level of the individual. This chapter presents an integrated evolutionary and clinical argument that the time has come to transcend efforts to categorise peoples’ risk of taking their own lives. A brighter future awaits mental healthcare if the behaviour’s essential non-predictability is understood and accepted. The pain-brain evolutionary theory of suicide predicts inter alia that all intellectually competent humans carry the potential for suicide, and that suicides will occur largely at random. The randomness arises because, over an evolutionary timescale, selection of adaptive defences will have sought out and exploited all operative correlates of suicide and will thus have exhausted those correlates’ predictive power. Completed suicides are therefore statistical residuals – events intrinsically devoid of informational cues by which the organism could have avoided self-destruction. Empirical evidence supports this theoretical expectation. Suicide resists useful prediction at the level of the individual. Regardless of the means by which the assessment is made, people rated ‘high risk’ seldom take their own lives, even over extended periods. Consequently, if a prevention treatment is sufficiently safe and effective to be worth allotting to the ‘high-risk’ subset of a cohort of patients, it will be just as worthwhile for the rest. Prevention measures will offer the greatest prospects for success where the aleatory nature of suicide is accepted, acknowledging that ‘fault’ for rare, near-random, self-induced death resides not within the individual but as a universal human potentiality. A realistic, evolution-informed, clinical approach is proposed that focuses on risk communication in place of risk assessment. All normally sapient humans carry a vanishingly small daily risk of taking their own lives but are very well adapted to avoiding that outcome. Almost all of us nearly always find other solutions to the stresses of living.

Type
Chapter
Information
Evolutionary Psychiatry
Current Perspectives on Evolution and Mental Health
, pp. 134 - 152
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2022

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Ajdacic-Gross, V., Hepp, U., Seifritz, E. and Bopp, M. 2019. Rethinking suicides as mental accidents: towards a new paradigm. Journal of Affective Disorders, 252, 141151.Google Scholar
APA 2003. Practice Guideline for the Assessment and Treatment of Patients with Suicidal Behaviors. New York: American Psychiatric Association.Google Scholar
Atkinson, J. M. 1978. Discovering Suicide: Studies in the Social Organization of Sudden Death. London: Macmillan.Google Scholar
Baechler, J. 1975/1979. Les Suicides. New York: Basic Books.Google Scholar
Bartley, B. A., Kim, K., Medley, J. K. and Sauro, H. M. 2017. Synthetic biology: engineering living systems from biophysical principles. Biophysical Journal, 112, 10501058.Google Scholar
Belsher, B. E., Smolenski, D. J., Pruitt, L. D., Bush, N. E., Beech, E. H., Workman, D. E., Morgan, R. L., Evatt, D. P., Tucker, J. and Skopp, N. A. 2019. Prediction models for suicide attempts and deaths: a systematic review and simulation. JAMA Psychiatry, 76, 642651.Google Scholar
Bering, J. M. 2018. A Very Human Ending: How Suicide Haunts Our Species. London: Transworld.Google Scholar
Blanchard, M. and Farber, B. A. 2020. ‘It is never okay to talk about suicide’: patients’ reasons for concealing suicidal ideation in psychotherapy. Psychotherapy Research, 30, 124136.Google Scholar
Blanco, C., Wall, M. M. and Olfson, M. 2021. A population-level approach to suicide prevention. JAMA, 325, 23392340.Google Scholar
Bohannan, P. (ed.) 1960. African Homicide and Suicide. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Borges, G., Chiu, W. T., Hwang, I., Panchal, B. N., Ono, Y., Sampson, N., Kessler, R. C. and Nock, M. K. 2012. Prevalence, onset, and transitions among suicidal behaviors. In: Nock, M. K., Borges, G. and Ono, Y. (eds.), Suicide: Global Perspectives from the WHO World Mental Health Surveys. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 6574.Google Scholar
Braun, C., Bschor, T., Franklin, J. and Baethge, C. 2016. Suicides and suicide attempts during long-term treatment with antidepressants: a meta-analysis of 29 placebo-controlled studies including 6,934 patients with major depressive disorder. Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics, 85, 171179.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brodsky, B. S., Spruch-Feiner, A. and Stanley, B. 2018. The Zero Suicide Model: applying evidence-based suicide prevention practices to clinical care. Frontiers in Psychiatry, 9, 33.Google Scholar
Campbell, D. and Hale, R. 2017. Working in the Dark: Understanding the Pre-Suicide State of Mind. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Campbell, F. 2001. Living and working in the Canyon of Why. Proceedings of the Irish Association of Suicidology, 6, 9697.Google Scholar
Carter, G., Milner, A., Mcgill, K., Pirkis, J., Kapur, N. and Spittal, M. J. 2017. Predicting suicidal behaviours using clinical instruments: systematic review and meta-analysis of positive predictive values for risk scales. British Journal of Psychiatry, 210, 387395.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Castelli Dransart, D. A., Treven, M., Grad, O. T. and Andriessen, K. 2017. Impact of client suicide on health and mental health professionals. In: Andriessen, K., Krysinska, K. and Grad, O. T. (eds.), Postvention in Action: The International Handbook of Suicide Bereavement Support. Boston, MA: Hogrefe, pp. 245254.Google Scholar
Castillejos, M. C., Huertas, P., Martín, P. and Küstner, B. 2021. Prevalence of suicidality in the European general population: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Archives of Suicide Research, 24, 810828.Google Scholar
CDC 2021. Preventing Suicide. Atlanta, GA: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for Injury Prevention and Control.Google Scholar
Chan, M. K., Bhatti, H., Meader, N., Stockton, S., Evans, J., O’Connor, R. C., Kapur, N. and Kendall, T. 2016. Predicting suicide following self-harm: systematic review of risk factors and risk scales. British Journal of Psychiatry, 209, 277283.Google Scholar
Chen, Y.-Y., Chien‐Chang Wu, K., Wang, Y. and Yip, P. 2016. Suicide prevention through restricting access to suicide means and hotspots. In: O’Connor, R. C. and Pirkis, J. (eds.), International Handbook of Suicide Prevention, 2nd ed. Chichester: John Wiley and Sons, pp. 545560.Google Scholar
Chiles, J. A., Strosahl, K. D. and Roberts, L. W. 2019. Clinical Manual for Assessment and Treatment of Suicidal Patients. Washington, DC: American Psychiatric Association.Google Scholar
Chung, D., Hadzi-Pavlovic, D., Wang, M., Swaraj, S., Olfson, M. and Large, M. M. 2019. Meta-analysis of suicide rates in the first week and the first month after psychiatric hospitalisation. BMJ Open, 9, e023883.Google Scholar
Cole-King, A. and Platt, S. 2017. Suicide prevention for physicians: identification, intervention and mitigation of risk. Medicine, 45, 131134.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cole-King, A., Green, G., Gask, L., Hines, K. and Platt, S. 2013. Suicide mitigation: a compassionate approach to suicide prevention. Advances in Psychiatric Treatment, 19, 276283.Google Scholar
Corke, M., Mullin, K., Angel-Scott, H., Xia, S. and Large, M. M. 2021. Meta-analysis of the strength of exploratory suicide prediction models; from clinicians to computers. BJPsych Open, 7, 111.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Cuddy-Casey, M. and Orvaschel, H. 1997. Children’s understanding of death in relation to child suicidality and homicidality. Clinical Psychology Review, 17, 3345.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Czeisler, M. É., Lane, R. I., Petrosky, E., Wiley, J. F., Christensen, A., Njai, R., Weaver, M. D., Robbins, R. C., Facer-Childs, E. R., Barger, L. K., Czeisler, C. A., Howard, M. E. and Rajaratnam, S. M. W. 2020. Substance Use, and Suicidal Ideation during the COVID-19 Pandemic. Washington, DC: US Department of Health and Human Services/Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.Google Scholar
Davidson, C. L., Slish, M. L., Rhoades-Kerswill, S., O’Keefe, V. M. and Tucker, R. P. 2018. Encouraging health-promoting behaviors in primary care to reduce suicide rates. In: Hirsch, J. K., Chang, E. C. and Kelliher Rabon, J. (eds.), A Positive Psychological Approach to Suicide: Theory, Research, and Prevention. Cham: Springer, pp. 161181.Google Scholar
DeCatanzaro, D. 1981. Suicide and Self-Damaging Behavior: A Sociobiological Perspective. New York: Academic Press.Google Scholar
Deisenhammer, E. A., Ing, C.-M., Strauss, R., Kemmler, G., Hinterhuber, H. and Weiss, E. M. 2009. The duration of the suicidal process: how much time is left for intervention between consideration and accomplishment of a suicide attempt? Journal of Clinical Psychiatry, 70, 1924.Google Scholar
Draper, B. 2012. Isn’t it a bit risky to dismiss suicide risk assessment? Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry, 46, 385386.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Drum, D. J., Brownson, C., Denmark, A. B. and Smith, S. E. 2009. New data on the nature of suicidal crises in college students: shifting the paradigm. Professional Psychology: Research and Practice, 40, 213222.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dutheil, F., Aubert, C., Pereira, B., Dambrun, M., Moustafa, F., Mermillod, M., Trousselard, M., Lesage, F.-X. and Navel, V. 2019. Suicide among physicians and health-care workers: a systematic review and meta-analysis. PLoS ONE, 14, e0226361.Google Scholar
Dyregrov, K., Plyhn, E. and Dieserud, G. 2012. After the Suicide: Helping the Bereaved to Find a Path from Grief to Recovery. London: Jessica Kingsley.Google Scholar
Elzinga, E., De Kruif, A. J., De Beurs, D. P., Beekman, A. T., Franx, G. and Gilissen, R. 2020. Engaging primary care professionals in suicide prevention: a qualitative study. PLoS ONE, 15, e0242540.Google Scholar
Espeland, K., Hjelmeland, H. and Knizek, B. L. 2021. A call for change from impersonal risk assessment to a relational approach: professionals’ reflections on the national guidelines for suicide prevention in mental health care in Norway. International Journal of Qualitative Studies on Health and Well-Being, 16, 1868737.Google Scholar
Forte, A., Sarli, G., Polidori, L., Lester, D. and Pompili, M. 2021. The role of new technologies to prevent suicide in adolescence: a systematic review of the literature. Medicina, 57, 109.Google Scholar
Fosse, R., Ryberg, W., Carlsson, M. K. and Hammer, J. 2017. Predictors of suicide in the patient population admitted to a locked-door psychiatric acute ward. PLoS ONE, 12, e0173958.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Fox, K. R., Huang, X., GuzmÁN, E. M., Funsch, K. M., Cha, C. B., Ribeiro, J. D. and Franklin, J. C. 2020. Interventions for suicide and self-injury: a meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials across nearly 50 years of research. Psychological Bulletin, 146, 11171145.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Franklin, J. C. 2018. Suicide prediction remains difficult despite decades of research. Scientific American. Retrieved from www.scientificamerican.com/article/suicide-prediction-remains-difficult-despite-decades-of-research/Google Scholar
Franklin, J. C., Ribeiro, J. D., Fox, K. R., Bentley, K. H., Kleiman, E. M., Huang, X., Musacchio, K. M., Jaroszewski, A. C., Chang, B. P. and Nock, M. K. 2017. Risk factors for suicidal thoughts and behaviors: a meta-analysis of 50 years of research. Psychological Bulletin, 143, 187232.Google Scholar
Gale, T. M., Hawley, C. J., Butler, J., Morton, A. and Singhal, A. 2016. Perception of suicide risk in mental health professionals. PLoS ONE, 11, e0149791.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Goldberg, D. and Goodyer, I. 2005. The Origins and Course of Common Mental Disorders. Hove: Routledge.Google Scholar
Goldney, R. D. 2003. A novel integrated knowledge explanation of factors leading to suicide. New Ideas in Psychology, 21, 141146.Google Scholar
Graney, J., Hunt, I. M., Quinlivan, L., Rodway, C., Turnbull, P., Gianatsi, M., Appleby, L. and Kapur, N. 2020. Suicide risk assessment in UK mental health services: a national mixed-methods study. Lancet Psychiatry, 7, 10461053.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Greenberg, D. and Shefler, G. 2014. Patient suicide. Israel Journal of Psychiatry and Related Sciences, 51, 193198.Google Scholar
Groth, T. and Boccio, D. E. 2019. Psychologists’ willingness to provide services to individuals at risk of suicide. Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior, 49, 12411254.Google Scholar
Gunn, J. F. 2017. The Social Pain Model. Crisis, 38, 281286.Google Scholar
Gunn, J. F., Malo Ocejo, P. and Soper, C. A. 2021. Evolutionary psychology and suicidology. In: Shackelford, T. K. (ed.), The SAGE Handbook of Evolutionary Psychology, Vol. 3. London: SAGE, pp. 5193.Google Scholar
Hagström, A. S. 2020. Based theater and ‘stigmatized trauma’: the case of suicide bereavement. Frontiers in Psychology, 11, 1129.Google Scholar
Hendin, H. 1975. Growing up dead: student suicide. American Journal of Psychotherapy, 29, 327338.Google Scholar
Hendin, H., Haas, A. P., Maltsberger, J. T., Szanto, K. and Rabinowicz, H. 2004. Factors contributing to therapists’ distress after the suicide of a patient. American Journal of Psychiatry, 161, 14421446.Google Scholar
Hengartner, M. P., Amendola, S., Kaminski, J. A., Kindler, S., Bschor, T. and Ploderl, M. 2021. Suicide risk with selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors and new-generation serotonergic-noradrenergic antidepressants in adults: a systematic review and meta-analysis of observational studies. Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health. DOI: 10.1136/jech-2020-214611.Google Scholar
Himmelhoch, J. M. 1988. What destroys our restraints against suicide? Journal of Clinical Psychiatry, 49, 4652.Google Scholar
Hirsch, J. K., Chang, E. C. and Kelliher Rabon, J. (eds.) 2018. A Positive Psychological Approach to Suicide. Cham: Springer.Google Scholar
Hjelmeland, H. and Knizek, B. L. 2019. The emperor’s new clothes? A critical look at the interpersonal theory of suicide. Death Studies, 44, 168178.Google Scholar
House, A. 2020. Self-harm and suicide in adults: will safety plans keep people safe after self-harm? BJPsych Bulletin, 46, 13.Google Scholar
Humphrey, N. 2018. The lure of death: suicide and human evolution. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological Sciences, 373, 20170269.Google Scholar
Hundert, E. M. 1992. The brain’s capacity to form delusions as an evolutionary strategy for survival. In: Spitzer, M., Uehlein, F., Schwartz, M. A. and Mundt, C. (eds.), Phenomenology, Language & Schizophrenia. New York: Springer, pp. 346354.Google Scholar
Jacobson, G. 2017. Practice and malpractice in the evaluation of suicidal patients. In: Schouten, R. (ed.), Mental Health Practice and the Law. New York: Oxford University Press, pp. 6192.Google Scholar
Jacobson, R. 2015. Many antidepressant studies found tainted by pharma company influence. Scientific American, 29, 26. Retrieved from www.scientificamerican.com/article/many-antidepressant-studies-found-tainted-by-pharma-company-influence/Google Scholar
Jacobucci, R., Littlefield, A. K., Millner, A. J., Kleiman, E. M. and Steinley, D. 2021. Evidence of inflated prediction performance: a commentary on machine learning and suicide research. Clinical Psychological Science, 9, 129134.Google Scholar
Jaworski, K. and Scott, D. G. 2016. Understanding the unfathomable in suicide: poetry, absence, and the corporeal body. In: White, J. C., Marsh, I., Kral, M. J. and Morris, J. S. (eds.), Critical Suicidology: Re-thinking Suicide Research and Prevention for the 21st Century. Vancouver, BC: UBC Press, pp. 209228.Google Scholar
Joiner, T. E. 2010. Myths about Suicide. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Kahne, M. J. 1966. Suicide research: a critical review of strategies and potentialities in mental hospitals (part II). International Journal of Social Psychiatry, 12, 177186.Google Scholar
Kauffman, S. A. 1993. The Origins of Order: Self Organization and Selection in Evolution. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Kral, M. J. 1998. Suicide and the internalization of culture: three questions. Transcultural Psychiatry, 35, 221233.Google Scholar
Kuo, W.-H., Gallo, J. J. and Tien, A. Y. 2001. Incidence of suicide ideation and attempts in adults: the 13-year follow-up of a community sample in Baltimore, Maryland. Psychological Medicine, 31, 11811191.Google Scholar
Large, M. M. 2017. Emerging consensus on the positive predictive (and clinical) value of suicide risk assessment. British Journal of Psychiatry, Letter, 21 March.Google Scholar
Large, M. M. and Kapur, N. 2018. Psychiatric hospitalisation and the risk of suicide. British Journal of Psychiatry, 212, 269273.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Large, M. M., Kaneson, M., Myles, N., Myles, H., Gunaratne, P. and Ryan, C. J. 2016. Meta-analysis of longitudinal cohort studies of suicide risk assessment among psychiatric patients: heterogeneity in results and lack of improvement over time. PLoS ONE, 11, e0156322.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Large, M. M., Ryan, C. J. and Callaghan, S. 2012. Hindsight bias and the overestimation of suicide risk in expert testimony. The Psychiatrist, 36, 236237.Google Scholar
Large, M. M., Ryan, C. J., Carter, G. and Kapur, N. 2017. Can we usefully stratify patients according to suicide risk? BMJ, 359, j4627.Google Scholar
Large, M. M., Ryan, C. J., Singh, S. P., Paton, M. B. and Nielssen, O. B. 2011a. The predictive value of risk categorization in schizophrenia. Harvard Review of Psychiatry, 19, 2533.Google Scholar
Large, M. M., Smith, G., Sharma, S., Nielssen, O. and Singh, S. 2011b. Systematic review and meta‐analysis of the clinical factors associated with the suicide of psychiatric in‐patients. Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica, 124, 1819.Google Scholar
Lester, D. 2019a. Suicide, chaos theory, non-linearity, and the tipping point. In: Lester, D. (ed.), The End of Suicidology: Can We Ever Understand Suicide? New York: Nova Science Publishers, pp. 8996.Google Scholar
Lester, D. (ed.) 2019b. The End of Suicidology: Can We Ever Understand Suicide? New York: Nova Science Publishers.Google Scholar
Lieberman, M. D. 2013. Social: Why Our Brains Are Wired to Connect. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Magyary, D. 2002. Positive mental health: a turn of the century perspective. Issues in Mental Health Nursing, 23, 331349.Google Scholar
Mammen, O., Tew, J., Painter, T., Bettinelli, E. and Beckjord, J. 2020. Communicating suicide risk to families of chronically suicidal borderline personality disorder patients to mitigate malpractice risk. General Hospital Psychiatry, 67, 5157.Google Scholar
Mann, J. J., Michel, C. A. and Auerbach, R. P. 2021. Improving suicide prevention through evidence-based strategies: a systematic review. American Journal of Psychiatry, 178, 611624.Google Scholar
Marsh, I. 2016. Critiquing contemporary suicidology. In: White, J. C., Marsh, I., Kral, M. J. and Morris, J. S., (eds.), Critical Suicidology: Re-thinking Suicide Research and Prevention for the 21st Century. Vancouver, BC: UBC Press, pp. 1530.Google Scholar
Mayer, L., RÜSch, N., Frey, L. M., Nadorff, M. R., Drapeau, C. W., Sheehan, L. and Oexle, N. 2020. Anticipated suicide stigma, secrecy, and suicidality among suicide attempt survivors. Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior, 50, 706713.Google Scholar
McHugh, C. M. and Large, M. M. 2020. Can machine-learning methods really help predict suicide? Current Opinion in Psychiatry, 33, 369374.Google Scholar
Meehl, P. E. 1973. Why I do not attend case conferences. In: Psychodiagnosis: Selected Papers. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, pp. 225302.Google Scholar
Mew, E. J., Padmanathan, P., Konradsen, F., Eddleston, M., Chang, S.-S., Phillips, M. R. and Gunnell, D. 2017. The global burden of fatal self-poisoning with pesticides 2006–15: systematic review. Journal of Affective Disorders, 219, 93104.Google Scholar
Michaud, L., Dorogi, Y., Gilbert, S. and Bourquin, C. 2021. Patient perspectives on an intervention after suicide attempt: the need for patient centred and individualized care. PLoS ONE, 16, e0247393.Google Scholar
Michel, K. and Jobes, D. A. 2011. Building a Therapeutic Alliance with the Suicidal Patient. Washington, DC: American Psychological Association.Google Scholar
Milner, A., Spittal, M. J., Pirkis, J. and Lamontagne, A. D. 2013. Suicide by occupation: systematic review and meta-analysis. British Journal of Psychiatry, 203, 409416.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Moran, P., Coffey, C., Romaniuk, H., Olsson, C., Borschmann, R., Carlin, J. B. and Patton, G. C. 2012. The natural history of self-harm from adolescence to young adulthood: a population-based cohort study. Lancet, 379, 236243.Google Scholar
Mulder, R., Newton-Howes, G. and Coid, J. W. 2016. The futility of risk prediction in psychiatry. British Journal of Psychiatry, 209, 271272.Google Scholar
NCISH 2017. The National Confidential Inquiry into Suicide and Homicide by People with Mental Illness. Annual Report: England, Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales. Manchester: University of Manchester.Google Scholar
NICE 2011. Self-Harm in Over 8s: Long-Term Management (CG133). London: National Institute for Health and Care Excellence.Google Scholar
NICE 2012. Self-Harm: The NICE Guideline on Longer-Term Management. London: The British Psychological Society and The Royal College of Psychiatrists.Google Scholar
Nicholas, A., Pirkis, J. and Reavley, N. 2020. What responses do people at risk of suicide find most helpful and unhelpful from professionals and non-professionals? Journal of Mental Health. DOI: 10.1080/09638237.2020.1818701.Google Scholar
Obegi, J. H. 2021. How common is the denial of suicidal ideation? A literature review. General Hospital Psychiatry, 72, 9295.Google Scholar
Paris, J. 2021. Can we predict or prevent suicide? An update. Preventive Medicine, 152, 15.Google Scholar
Patel, V. 2015. Addressing social injustice: a key public mental health strategy. World Psychiatry, 14, 4344.Google Scholar
Pokorny, A. D. 1983. Prediction of suicide in psychiatric patients: report of a prospective study. Archives of General Psychiatry, 40, 249257.Google Scholar
Pompili, M., Murri, M. B., Patti, S., Innamorati, M., Lester, D., Girardi, P. and Amore, M. 2016. The communication of suicidal intentions: a meta-analysis. Psychological Medicine, 46, 22392253.Google Scholar
Power, M. 2004. The Nature of Risk: The Risk Management of Everything. London: Demos.Google Scholar
Preti, A. 2011. Do animals commit suicide? Does it matter? Crisis, 32, 14.Google Scholar
Rahman, M. S. and Kapur, N. 2014. Quality of risk assessment prior to suicide and homicide (letter). Psychiatric Bulletin, 38, 4647.Google Scholar
Reynolds, V. 2016. Hate kills: a social justice response to ‘suicide’. In: White, J. C., Marsh, I., Kral, M. J. and Morris, J. S. (eds.), Critical Suicidology: Re-thinking Suicide Research and Prevention for the 21st Century. Vancouver, BC: UBC Press, pp. 169187.Google Scholar
Rogers, M. L., Ringer, F. B. and Joiner, T. E. 2018. The association between suicidal ideation and lifetime suicide attempts is strongest at low levels of depression. Psychiatry Research, 270, 324328.Google Scholar
Ross, E. L., Zuromski, K. L., Reis, B. Y., Nock, M. K., Kessler, R. C. and Smoller, J. W. 2021. Accuracy requirements for cost-effective suicide risk prediction among primary care patients in the US. JAMA Psychiatry, 78, 642650.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ross, N. E., Ciuffetelli, G. and Rozel, J. S. 2020. Legal concerns after a patient suicide. Current Psychiatry, 19, 2223.Google Scholar
Royal College of Psychiatrists 2020. Self-Harm and Suicide in Adults: Final Report of the Patient Safety Group (College Report CG229). London: RCPsych.Google Scholar
Rudd, M. D. and Roberts, L. W. 2019. Assessment of suicide risk. In: Roberts, L. W. (ed.), Textbook of Psychiatry, 7th ed. Washington, DC: American Psychiatric Association Publishing, pp. 91110.Google Scholar
Ryan, C. J., Callaghan, S. and Large, M. 2015a. The importance of least restrictive care: the clinical implications of a recent High Court decision on negligence. Australasian Psychiatry, 23, 415417.Google Scholar
Ryan, C. J., Large, M., Gribble, R., Macfarlane, M., Ilchef, R. and Tietze, T. 2015b. Assessing and managing suicidal patients in the emergency department. Australasian Psychiatry, 23, 513516.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Sanati, A. 2021. Interview, Matthew Large. BJPsych Bulletin, 45, 190192.Google Scholar
Schultz, D. T. 2000. Defending suicide-related malpractice cases: a lawyer’s perspective. Journal of Psychiatric Practice, 6, 345348.Google Scholar
Shaffer, D. and Fisher, P. 1981. The epidemiology of suicide in children and young adolescents. Journal of the American Academy of Child Psychiatry, 20, 545565.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Silverman, M. M. and Berman, A. L. 2014. Training for suicide risk assessment and suicide risk formulation. Academic Psychiatry, 38, 526537.Google Scholar
Silverman, M. M. and Maris, R. W. 1995. The prevention of suicidal behaviors: an overview. Suicide and Life‐Threatening Behavior, 25, 1021.Google Scholar
Solano, P., Pizzorno, E., Pompili, M., Serafini, G. and Amore, M. 2018. Conceptualizations of suicide through time and socio-economic factors: a historical mini-review. Irish Journal of Psychological Medicine, 35, 7586.Google Scholar
Soper, C. A. 2018. The Evolution of Suicide. Cham: Springer.Google Scholar
Soper, C. A. 2019a. Adaptation to the suicidal niche. Evolutionary Psychological Science, 5, 454471.Google Scholar
Soper, C. A. 2019b. Beyond the search for suigiston: how evolution offers oxygen for suicidology. In: Zeigler-Hill, V. and Shackelford, T. K. (eds.), Evolutionary Perspectives on Death. Cham: Springer, pp. 3761.Google Scholar
Soper, C. A. 2021. The Evolution of Life Worth Living: Why We Choose to Live. Cambridge, UK: Author.Google Scholar
Soper, C. A. 2022. Ethological problems with the interpersonal theory of suicide. OMEGA – Journal of Death and Dying. DOI: 10.1177/00302228211073010Google Scholar
St John-Smith, P., Michael, A. and Davies, T. 2009. Coping with a coroner’s inquest: a psychiatrist’s guide. Advances in Psychiatric Treatment, 15, 716.Google Scholar
Steeg, S., Quinlivan, L., Nowland, R., Carroll, R., Casey, D., Clements, C., Cooper, J., Davies, L., Knipe, D. and Ness, J. 2018. Accuracy of risk scales for predicting repeat self-harm and suicide: a multicentre, population-level cohort study using routine clinical data. BMC Psychiatry, 18, 113.Google Scholar
Stone, D. M., Simon, T. R., Fowler, K. A., Kegler, S. R., Yuan, K., Holland, K. M., Ivey-Stephenson, A. Z. and Crosby, A. E. 2018. Vital signs: trends in state suicide rates – United States, 1999–2016 and circumstances contributing to suicide – 27 states, 2015. Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, 67, 617624.Google Scholar
Syme, K. L. and Hagen, E. H. 2018. When saying ‘sorry’ isn’t enough: is some suicidal behavior a costly signal of apology? A cross-cultural test. Human Nature, 30, 117141.Google Scholar
Syme, K. L., Garfield, Z. H. and Hagen, E. H. 2016. Testing the bargaining vs. inclusive fitness models of suicidal behavior against the ethnographic record. Evolution and Human Behavior, 37, 179192.Google Scholar
Szmukler, G. and Rose, N. 2013. Risk assessment in mental health care: values and costs. Behavioral Sciences & the Law, 31, 125140.Google Scholar
Taylor, A. K., Steeg, S., Quinlivan, L., Gunnell, D., Hawton, K. and Kapur, N. 2021. Accuracy of individual and combined risk-scale items in the prediction of repetition of self-harm: multicentre prospective cohort study. BJPsych Open, 7, E2.Google Scholar
Ten Have, M., De Graaf, R., Van Dorsselaer, S., Verdurmen, J., Van’T Land, H., Vollebergh, W. and Beekman, A. 2009. Incidence and course of suicidal ideation and suicide attempts in the general population. Canadian Journal of Psychiatry, 54, 824833.Google Scholar
Tishler, C. L. and Reiss, N. S. 2009. Inpatient suicide: preventing a common sentinel event. General Hospital Psychiatry, 31, 103109.Google Scholar
Tooby, J. and Cosmides, L. 1990. The past explains the present: emotional adaptations and the structure of ancestral environments. Ethology and Sociobiology, 11, 375424.Google Scholar
Tromans, S., Umar, A., Torr, J., Alexander, R. and Bhaumik, S. 2020. Depressive disorders in people with intellectual disability. In: Alexander, R. and Bhaumik, S. (eds.), Oxford Textbook of the Psychiatry of Intellectual Disability. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 105116.Google Scholar
Turecki, G. and Brent, D. A. 2016. Suicide and suicidal behaviour. Lancet, 387, 12271239.Google Scholar
Undrill, G. 2007. The risks of risk assessment. Advances in Psychiatric Treatment, 13, 291297.Google Scholar
Wand, T. 2011. Investigating the evidence for the effectiveness of risk assessment in mental health care. Issues in Mental Health Nursing, 33, 27.Google Scholar
Weinberg, S. 2015. To Explain the World: The Discovery of Modern Science. New York: Harper Collins.Google Scholar
Westers, N. J. 2020. 25 years of suicide research and prevention: how much has changed? Clinical Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 25, 729733.Google Scholar
White, J. C., Marsh, I., Kral, M. J. and Morris, J. S. 2016. Rethinking suicide. In: White, J. C., Marsh, I., Kral, M. J. and Morris, J. S. (eds.), Critical Suicidology: Re-thinking Suicide Research and Prevention for the 21st Century. Vancouver, BC: UBC Press, pp. 211.Google Scholar
WHO 2014. Preventing Suicide: A Global Imperative. Geneva: World Health Organization.Google Scholar
WHO 2014. Suicide Worldwide in 2019: Global Health Estimates. Geneva: World Health Organization.Google Scholar
Williams, D. 2021. Socially adaptive belief. Mind & Language, 36, 333354.Google Scholar
Wyder, M., Ray, M. K., Russell, S., Kinsella, K., Crompton, D. and Van Den Akker, J. 2021. Suicide risk assessment in a large public mental health service: do suicide risk classifications identify those at risk? Australasian Psychiatry, 29, 322325.Google Scholar
Yang, B. and Lester, D. 2021. Is there a natural suicide rate? An update and review. Suicide Studies, 2, 512.Google Scholar
Zortea, T. C., Cleare, S., Melson, A. J., Wetherall, K. and O’Connor, R. C. 2020. Understanding and managing suicide risk. British Medical Bulletin, 134, 7384.Google Scholar
Zou, W., Tang, L. and Bie, B. 2021. The stigmatization of suicide: a study of stories told by college students in China. Death Studies. DOI: 10.1080/07481187.2021.1958396Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure [email protected] is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

Available formats
×