Non-disclosure of suicidal ideation in psychiatric inpatients: Rates and correlates
- PMID: 33586630
- DOI: 10.1080/07481187.2021.1879317
Non-disclosure of suicidal ideation in psychiatric inpatients: Rates and correlates
Abstract
The study explored how common non-disclosure of suicidal ideation is in a sample of adult psychiatric inpatients (N = 171) plus associated patient characteristics. A large percentage (51.5%) withheld some information on suicidal ideation during admission. In multivariable analyses, correlates of non-disclosure included a diagnosis of emotionally unstable personality disorder, low satisfaction with stay, and symptoms of the suicide crisis syndrome. In univariate analyses, therapists' emotional response to the patient was also a correlate. Findings indicate that among acute psychiatric inpatients, non-disclosure of suicidal ideation is quite common, requiring awareness from clinicians relying on this parameter in suicide risk assessments.
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