Background. Suicidal ideation among acutely medically ill elderly inpatients has been sparsely studied. A prospective study measuring the prevalence, correlates and longitudinal stability of suicidal ideation in acutely medically ill elderly inpatients was undertaken. Method. Suicidal ideation was
Some predictors of mortality in acutely medically ill elderly inpatients
✍ Scribed by Ajit Shah; Katharina Hoxey; Vidurath Mayadunne
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2000
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 91 KB
- Volume
- 15
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0885-6230
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Background. The prevalence of depression and suicidal ideation in acutely medically ill elderly inpatients is high. Depression and suicidal ideation are associated with increased mortality.
Method. The following were examined among acutely medically ill elderly inpatients: the association between mortality at 6±8 month follow-up period and Brief Assessment Scale (BAS-DEP) depression caseness and scores, using BAS-DEP items of a wish to die', pessimism' and `life not worth living', functional disability measured by the London Handicap Scale (LHS) and the Barthel Index (BI), suicidal ideation measured by the Beck Suicidal Ideation Scale (BSSI), severity of physical illness, previous deliberate self-harm and demographic variables.
Results. On univariate analysis, signi®cant associations between mortality and being married, previous deliberate self-harm, higher scores on the BAS-DEP item of pessimism, lower scores on the LHS and the BI and higher scores on the BSSI were observed. On multivariate analysis only LHS scores and BSSI scores independently predicted mortality.
Conclusions. It is hypothesized that suicidal ideation and functional disability may have a causal eect on mortality. This hypothesis could be tested by early identi®cation of suicidal ideation and/or functional disability and subsequent interventions speci®cally designed to improve these two facets using a randomized controlled design.
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## Background: The prevalence of depression in acutely medically ill elderly inpatients is high. depression in the elderly is associated with increased mortality. ## Method: The association between mortality at 18-month follow-up and depression, depressive symptoms and demographic variables at th