Investigating the effects of suicide exposure among a clinical sample of active duty service members

Author:

Schmied Emily A.12ORCID,Jun Hee‐Jin12,Glassman Lisa H.345,Pippard Nicole6,Walter Kristen H.14ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Public Health San Diego State University San Diego California USA

2. Institute for Behavioral and Community Health San Diego State University San Diego California USA

3. Leidos, Inc. San Diego California USA

4. Health and Behavioral Sciences Department Naval Health Research Center San Diego California USA

5. University of California San Diego, La Jolla California USA

6. University of California, San Diego–San Diego State University Joint Doctoral Program, Public Health University of California San Diego California USA

Abstract

AbstractSuicide exposure warrants further investigation as a risk factor for suicide among military service members. This study aimed to examine associations among suicide exposure, suicidal ideation (SI), and psychological symptoms in a clinical sample of service members (N = 1,565, 64.4% suicide‐exposed) and identify how one's relationship with the deceased impacts suicidality and psychological health in exposed individuals. A secondary analysis of cross‐sectional survey data was conducted. Generalized linear regression analyses were used to identify associations between suicide exposure and both current SI and psychological symptoms among all participants; the associations between suicide exposure characteristics and psychological symptoms were only examined among exposed individuals. Exposure was not significantly associated with higher SI, β = .007, SE = .16, p = .965, but was associated with PTSD, β = 1.60, SE = 0.49, p = .001; anxiety, β = .68, SE = .31, p = .031; and insomnia symptoms, β = .98, SE = .25, p < .001. Among participants who had been exposed, high/long impact of exposure was positively associated with SI, β = 0.94, SE = .26, p < .001, and psychological symptoms, PTSD: β = 2.32, SE = .77, p = .002; anxiety: β = 1.39, SE = .50, p = .005; insomnia: β = .96, SE = .39, p = .015. Results illustrate the significant issue of suicide exposure within the military and show consideration of suicide exposure as a potential risk factor for adverse psychological outcomes is warranted.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Clinical Psychology

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