Thursday December 19, 2024

People with depression at high risk of suicide after hospitalization

Published : 20 Feb 2024, 03:25

Updated : 20 Feb 2024, 03:30

  DF Report
Pixabay File Photo.

Continued treatment is important as those suffering from depression are at risk of suicide for the first three days after psychiatric hospitalization, said Helsinki-Uusimaa Hospital District (HUS) in a press release on Monday referring to a study.

The risk of suicide is affected by the severity of the depression and previous suicidal tendencies.

According to the study, patients with depression are at their highest risk of suicide during the first three days after psychiatric hospitalisation. The risk is 330 times higher than that of the rest of the population.

After the first few days, the risk of suicide remains high, but decreases steadily over time.

Only a small minority of all patients with depression are treated in a psychiatric hospital, while the majority are treated in outpatient care.

"Patients are often referred to hospital care specifically because of the risk of suicide. However, this recent study clearly indicates that the risk is not always over at the end of hospitalisation. The transition from the hospital to outpatient care is a critical period", said Head Physician of Psychiatry at HUS and Professor at the University of Helsinki Erkki Isometsä.

The extensive Finnish study charted suicides that occurred after the hospitalisation of depression patients.

The patients in the study were diagnosed with depression and treated in a psychiatric hospital for it.

The study is based on register data on all treatment periods of patients in Finland who were treated in a psychiatric hospital due to depression in 1996-2017,a total of 91,161 patients and 193,197 treatment periods. Of these patients, 1,976 died of suicide during a monitoring period of up to two years.

Over the 22-year period covered by the study, suicide mortality has decreased significantly in Finland as a whole, including the suicide rates of depression patients.

It was already known that, after psychiatric hospitalisation, the risk of suicide is high as the patient is transferred to outpatient care. Now, the extensive data of the recently published study gives a more detailed picture of the risk stages of treatment.

The study also provides information that is important for clinical decision-making on the risk factors of suicide and the time windows in which they are present. In the short term, the severity of the patient’s depression and the nature of their previous self-harming behaviour are particularly significant. These factors have not been charted in previous studies during the period of very high risk.

"In my opinion, the study strongly advocates for the importance of close cooperation between the hospital and outpatient care. It’s also essential to ensure that the treatment of depression was effective in the hospital," said Isometsä.

It was not possible to chart the factors related to the treatment received by patients in the study.

However, the research observations highlight the significance of continued treatment when a depressed patient is transferred from a psychiatric hospital to outpatient care.

The first author of the study is Chief Physician Kari Aaltonen from HUS Psychiatry. The study also involved Professor Erkki Isometsä from HUS Psychiatry and the University of Helsinki, Assistant Professor Christian Hakulinen from the University of Helsinki and the Finnish Institute for Health and Welfare, Professor Reijo Sund from the University of Eastern Finland, and Professor Sami Pirkola from the University of Tampere.