We examined all completed suicides by children and adolescents in Los Angeles County who died during 1996 and 1997. There were 46 subjects, aged 11 through 16. The majority of the decedents were males and over age 14. The predominant racial group was Hispanic. There was an almost even split between firearms and hanging as the means of death. Females had a statistically significantly higher rate of prior suicide attempts than males. Over one-third left a suicide note, almost one-half were noted to be depressed, and 22% tested positive for alcohol or illicit drugs. Less than one-quarter were in mental health treatment. Eighty-seven percent had difficulty transitioning to or during adolescence; e.g., problems at home, legal and school difficulties, and relationship losses. These findings are discussed in terms of Eriksonian developmental theory. We offer recommendations for intervention and prevention of suicide.
Objective Violence toward others is a serious problem among a subset of military veterans. This study reports on predictive validity of a brief screening tool for violence in veterans. Methods Data on risk factors at an initial wave and on violent behavior at 1-year follow-up were collected in two independent sampling frames: (a) a national random sample survey of 1090 Iraq and Afghanistan veterans, and (b) in-depth assessments of 197 dyads of Iraq and Afghanistan veterans and collateral informants. Results We chose candidate risk factors—financial instability, combat experience, alcohol misuse, history of violence and arrests, and anger associated with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD)—based on empirical support in published research. Tools measuring these risk factors were examined, and items with the most robust statistical association to outcomes were selected. The resultant 5-item clinical tool, the Violence Screening and Assessment of Needs (VIO-SCAN), yielded area under the curve (AUC) statistics ranging from .74 – .78 for the national survey and from .74 – .80 for the in-depth assessments, depending on level of violence analyzed using multiple logistic regression. Conclusions To our knowledge, the VIO-SCAN is the first empirically-derived assessment tool for violence developed specifically for military veteran populations. As in civilians, past violence and arrest history had a robust association with future violence in veterans. Analyses show that individual factors examined in isolation (e.g., PTSD, combat experience) do not adequately convey a veteran’s level of violence risk; rather, as shown by the VIO-SCAN, multiple risk factors need to be taken into account in tandem when assessing risk in veterans. Use of evidence-based methods for assessing and managing violence in veterans is discussed, addressing benefits and limits of integrating risk assessment tools into clinical practice.
Self-inflicted contact gunshot wounds to the head have usually been considered presumptive of suicide. This study evaluates whether sufficient psychological data are gathered in such cases to support a manner of death determination of suicide. We suggest that law enforcement agencies and coroner's departments do not fully explore the decedent's state of mind at the time of death. We studied the first 50 consecutive deaths in 1993 in a major metropolitan county due to self-inflicted gunshot wounds to the head. The sample consists primarily of unmarried, white males, with a median age of 35 years, who displayed psychiatric disturbance, primarily depression, before their death. Younger individuals were often under the influence of alcohol and/or drugs at the time of death. Stressors, such as the loss of a loved one, are common among young and middle-aged persons, while serious health problems are found among the majority of middle-aged and elderly individuals. Many of the findings of this study are consistent with the literature regarding individuals who commit suicide. Although data on many important psychological risk factors are missing in most cases, sufficient psychological material is gathered about the decedent's mental condition at the time of death to support a suicide determination.
Participants were 45 violent California male prison inmates scoring 30 or more on the Psychopathy Checklist-Revised (PCL-R; Hare, 1991, 2003). Inmates were evaluated using Rorschach and neuropsychological test data. The participants' intellectual functioning was within the low-average range and displayed a lack of flexibility. Rorschach data were not suggestive of chronic narcissism and anger as in other psychopathic samples. This group resembled Exner's normative sample of high Lambda adults. Consistent with previous studies, psychopaths demonstrated poor emotional modulation, diminished reality testing, little interest in people, and virtually no attachment capacity. Most utilized a simplistic, avoidant, and concrete style. This appeared to be consistent with the concrete thinking and fragmentation attributed to the criminal personality. Concrete thinking is based upon literal interpretations of events. Fragmentation is associated with attitudes that are situation specific and self-serving.
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