학술논문

Antidepressant treatment is associated with a reduction in suicidal ideation and suicide attempts.
Document Type
Article
Source
Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica. Aug2008, Vol. 118 Issue 2, p116-122. 7p. 2 Diagrams, 3 Charts, 1 Graph.
Subject
*SUICIDAL behavior
*DEPRESSED persons
*SUICIDAL ideation
*ANTIDEPRESSANTS
*SUICIDE
*MENTAL depression
Language
ISSN
0001-690X
Abstract
Objective: To measure changes in suicidal behaviours during 6 months of treatment with antidepressants. Method: A group of depressed patients ( n = 195) were assessed for suicidal behaviours in the 6 months prior to treatment. They were prospectively assessed for suicidal behaviours during 6 months of treatment with antidepressants. Results: Patients who made suicide attempts fell from 39 in the 6 months prior to treatment to 20 during treatment. Significant suicidal ideation reduced from 47% at baseline to 14% at 3 weeks remaining below this during the rest of the treatment. Twenty patients had emergent suicidal ideation; five of them had not experienced some level of suicidal behaviour in the 6 months prior to treatment. Conclusion: Suicide behaviours are common in depressed out-patients. Antidepressant treatment is associated with a rapid and significant reduction in suicidal behaviours. The rate of emergent suicidal behaviour was low and the risk benefit ratio for antidepressants appears to favour their use. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]