@article{1e5aba22aa544a9a8dc8fb40b5f2f9e9,
title = "Risk factors for the transition from suicide ideation to suicide attempt: Results from the army study to assess risk and resilience in Servicemembers (Army STARRS)",
abstract = "Prior research has shown that most known risk factors for suicide attempts in the general population actually predict suicide ideation rather than attempts among ideators. Yet clinical interest in predicting suicide attempts often involves the evaluation of risk among patients with ideation. We examined a number of characteristics of suicidal thoughts hypothesized to predict incident attempts in a retrospective analysis of lifetime ideators (N = 3,916) drawn from a large (N = 29,982), representative sample of United States Army soldiers. The most powerful predictors of first nonfatal lifetime suicide attempt in a multivariate model controlling for previously known predictors (e.g., demographics, mental disorders) were: recent onset of ideation, presence and recent onset of a suicide plan, low controllability of suicidal thoughts, extreme risk-taking or {"}tempting fate,{"} and failure to answer questions about the characteristics of one's suicidal thoughts. A predictive model using these risk factors had strong accuracy (area under the curve [AUC] = .93), with 66.2% of all incident suicide attempts occurring among the 5% of soldiers with highest composite predicted risk. This high concentration of risk in this retrospective study suggests that a useful clinical decision support model could be constructed from prospective data to identify those with highest risk of subsequent suicide attempt.",
keywords = "Army, Military, Prediction, Suicidal, Suicide",
author = "{On behalf of the STARRS-LS collaborators} and Nock, {Matthew K.} and Millner, {Alexander J.} and Joiner, {Thomas E.} and Gutierrez, {Peter M.} and Georges Han and Irving Hwang and Andrew King and Naifeh, {James A.} and Sampson, {Nancy A.} and Zaslavsky, {Alan M.} and Stein, {Murray B.} and Ursano, {Robert J.} and Kessler, {Ronald C.} and Aliaga, {Pablo A.} and Benedek, {David M.} and Fullerton, {Carol S.} and Gifford, {Robert K.} and Hurwitz, {Paul E.} and Kao, {Tzu Cheg} and Mash, {Holly Herberman} and McCarroll, {James E.} and Ng, {Tsz Hin Hinz} and Patcho Santiago and Laura Campbell-Sills and Sonia Jain and Steven Heeringa and James Wagner and Nancy Gebler and Lisa Lewandowski-Romps and Chen, {Chia Yen} and Smoller, {Jordan W.} and Kenneth Cox and Joel Gelernter",
note = "Funding Information: Army STARRS was sponsored by the Department of the Army and funded under cooperative agreement U01MH087981 (2009–2015) with the United States Department of Health and Human Services, National Institutes of Health, National Institute of Mental Health (NIH/NIMH). Subsequently, STARRS-LS was sponsored and funded by the Department of Defense (Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences Grant HU0001-15-2–0004). The contents are solely the responsibility of the authors and do not necessarily represent the views of the Department of Health and Human Services, NIMH, the Department of the Army, the Department of Veterans Affairs, or the Department of Defense. A complete list of Army STARRS publications can be found at http://www.STARRS-LS.org. This work also was supported in part by funding from the Military Suicide Research Consortium (MSRC), an effort supported by the Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs (Award W81XWH-10-2–0181). Opinions, interpretations, conclusions, and recommendations are those of the authors and are not necessarily endorsed by the MSRC, the Department of Veterans Affairs, or the Department of Defense. Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2018 American Psychological Association.",
year = "2018",
month = feb,
doi = "10.1037/abn0000317",
language = "English",
volume = "127",
pages = "139--149",
journal = "Journal of Abnormal Psychology",
issn = "0021-843X",
number = "2",
}