Major Suicide Factors According to Research:
- A previous history of suicide attempts.
- Mental illness, in particular Major Depression, Schizophrenia, Bipolar Disorder, and Borderline Personality Disorder.
- Substance Use Disorders.
- Chronic medical problems, especially terminal illness and severe, refractory pain.
- Major life losses such as bereavement, termination from work, and sudden financial mishap.
- Family history of suicide, especially first-degree relatives.
- Easy access to lethal means, especially firearms
- Childhood traumas.
- Sexual assault.
- Barriers to treatment (stigma, lack of health insurance, financial constraints).
- Strong connections to family and/or friends, coworkers or religious congregation.
- Easy access to mental health care and strong rapport with providers.
- Religious beliefs that discourage suicide.
Seek Help to Prevent Suicide:
Things especially important to watch out for include:
- individuals isolating themselves
- giving away an inordinate number of personal (especially cherished) belongings
- talking often about death and dying
- talking about being a burden to or fantasizing about whether they will “be missed” if they were to pass away.
The use of alcohol and other recreational drugs in conjunction with mental illness is also a sign that intervention is necessary. Psychoactive drugs exacerbate mental illness and impair judgment, especially when used in excess. Logical reasoning that allows despondent people to talk themselves out of self-harm does not come into play as the effects of intoxication include clouding judgment.
The most important part of helping individuals prone to suicide is being a good listener. Our own fear of losing a loved one comes into play when we suspect they may be seriously mentally ill or suicidal. At these times we may tend to reflexively start giving advice or making suggestions. Listening empathically will provide us with more information and often provides more reassurance and grounding to a distressed person than any advice or suggestion we make.
And please don’t forget one person in all of this yourself. Drawing from the prevention model, start doing your own primary prevention today: dedicate time to self-care, nurture your connection to friends and family, open up to others about your negative feelings, avoid substance use, exercise regularly, and cultivate hobbies and interests you are passionate about.
Would you like to have a live question and answer session with Dr. Tariq?
Join us for a Facebook live session on:
THURSDAY, APRIL 15, 2021 AT 12 PM CDT
Topic: Suicide: Facts, Causes, and Prevention
Khwaja Tariq, MD
Dr. Khwaja Tariq, MD is a board certified psychiatrist in Friendswood, Texas. He is affiliated with Texas Behavioral Health.