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- Title
Why some depressive patients perform suicidal acts and others do not.
- Authors
Akechi, Tatsuo; Kato, Tadashi; Fujise, Noboru; Yonemoto, Naohiro; Tajika, Aran; Furukawa, Toshi A.; Shimodera, Shinji; Yamada, Mitsuhiko; Inagaki, Masatoshi; Watanabe, Norio; Miki, Kazuhira; Ogawa, Yusuke; Takeshima, Nozomi; Higuchi, Teruhiko; Hirayasu, Yoshio; Kada, Akiko; Koyama, Tsukasa; Kusumi, Ichiro; Inoue, Takeshi; Kako, Yuki
- Abstract
Major depression is one of the most relevant risk factors for suicide, but there are few data explaining why some depressive patients have suicidality and others do not in Japan, while the previous systematic review suggests the relevance of male gender, past suicidality, severe depression and substance misuse and so on.[1] We carried out a preliminary investigation of the clinical factors in patients with major depression with and without suicidal ideation, using the data of the SUN D trial (a multi-center randomized controlled clinical trial). Kochi University: Hajime Kubouchi (Kokokara Clinic), Hirotoshi Sato (Harimayabashi Clinic), Shinji Shimodera (Kochi University), Hirokazu Fujita (Kochi University), Takashi Itoh (Medical Counseling Room Itoh Clinic), Ryosuke Fujito (Fujito Hospital), Sawako Kanno (Atago Hospital), Hiroshi Hashizume (Fujito Hospital), Ippei Morokuma (Kochi University), Yosuke Suga (Kochi University), Mikako Fuji (Kochi University).
- Subjects
SUICIDE risk factors
- Publication
Psychiatry & Clinical Neurosciences, 2019, Vol 73, Issue 10, p660
- ISSN
1323-1316
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/pcn.12918