February 1, 2018

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Risk of suicide among hospitalised patients with depression decreases by half in Finland

The risk of death by suicide among patients with depression who have undergone psychiatric inpatient treatment has significantly decreased since 1991. These are the results of a large Finnish cohort study, which tracked 56,826 patients who had been hospitalised for depression for the first time between 1991 and 2011.

The study compared the risk of in treated during different time periods. The risk of a depression patient to die by suicide after hospitalisation has been consistently on the decline, falling by half from the early 1990s.

The hazard ratio for suicide among patients treated between 1996 and 2000 had fallen to 0.69 times that of patients treated between 1991 and 1995. Patients treated between 2001 and 2005 had a hazard ratio of 0.54 times that of the earliest group, and patients treated between 2006 and 2011, 0.48.

Based on national register data, deaths by suicide were investigated for an average of eleven years, up to 24 years, until 2014. Over the course of 24 years of monitoring, the risk of suicide was 6.1%. Men's risk of suicide (8.6%) was double that of women (4.1%). The study used the research data compiled by the National Institute of Health and Welfare in the MERTTU project.

Many underlying factors at play

The study shows for the first time that it is possible for the suicide mortality to decline markedly at the population level, and that it has decreased significantly under current care practices. Finland's suicide figures peaked in 1990, and have since halved by 2014. This study indicates that the among patients with severe depression who have received psychiatric inpatient treatment has decreased similarly.

However, the study does not present the reasons for this decrease. There are several potential underlying factors at play, and they may have helped or hindered the process.

Depression is the most significant single mental health problem contributing to suicide, and approximately half of people who die by suicide have had . In December 2017, the Finnish Parliament granted funding to launch a new suicide prevention programme in Finland. The Ministry for Social Affairs and Health has also granted separate funding to draft Current Care Guidelines for healthcare professionals to prevent suicides.

More information: Kari I. Aaltonen et al. Decline in suicide mortality after psychiatric hospitalization for depression in Finland between 1991 and 2014, World Psychiatry (2018). DOI: 10.1002/wps.20501

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