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The relationship between nonsuicidal self-injury and attempted suicide: converging evidence from four samples.

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TLDR
NSSI may be a uniquely important risk factor for suicide because its presence is associated with both increased desire and capability for suicide.
Abstract
Theoretical and empirical literature suggests that nonsuicidal self-injury (NSSI) may represent a particularly important risk factor for suicide. The present study examined the associations of NSSI and established suicide risk factors to attempted suicide in four samples: adolescent psychiatric patients (n = 139), adolescent high school students (n = 426), university undergraduates (n = 1,364), and a random-digit dialing sample of United States adults (n = 438). All samples were administered measures of NSSI, suicide ideation, and suicide attempts; the first three samples were also administered measures of depression, anxiety, impulsivity, and borderline personality disorder (BPD). In all four samples, NSSI exhibited a robust relationship to attempted suicide (median Phi = .36). Only suicide ideation exhibited a stronger relationship to attempted suicide (median Phi = .47), whereas associations were smaller for BPD (median rpb = .29), depression (median rpb = .24), anxiety (median rpb = .16), and impulsivity (median rpb = .11). When these known suicide risk factors and NSSI were simultaneously entered into logistic regression analyses, only NSSI and suicide ideation maintained significant associations with attempted suicide. Results suggest that NSSI is an especially important risk factor for suicide. Findings are interpreted in the context of Joiner's interpersonal-psychological theory of suicide; specifically, NSSI may be a uniquely important risk factor for suicide because its presence is associated with both increased desire and capability for suicide.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Suicide, Suicide Attempts, and Suicidal Ideation

TL;DR: The ideation-to-action framework stipulates that the development of suicidal ideation and the progression from ideation to suicide attempts are distinct phenomena with distinct explanations and predictors.
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Differentiating suicide attempters from suicide ideators: a critical frontier for suicidology research.

TL;DR: This special section of Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior serves to highlight this knowledge gap and provide new data on differences (and similarities) between suicide attempters and suicide ideators.
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What distinguishes suicide attempters from suicide ideators? A meta‐analysis of potential factors.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors meta-analyzed 27 studies comparing sociodemographic and clinical variables between attempters and ideators, and found that depression, alcohol use disorders, hopelessness, gender, race, marital status, and education all were similar in the two groups.
Journal ArticleDOI

Gender differences in the prevalence of nonsuicidal self-injury: A meta-analysis

TL;DR: The results showed that across studies women were significantly more likely to report a history of NSSI than men, and Moderator analyses showed that the gender difference was larger for clinical samples, compared to college/community samples, and there was not a significant relation between age and effect size.
Journal ArticleDOI

Correlates of suicide attempts among self-injurers: a meta-analysis.

TL;DR: After suicidal ideation, the strongest predictors of SA history were NSSI frequency, number of N SSI methods, and hopelessness, while Demographic characteristics, such as gender, ethnicity, and age, were weakly associated with SA history.
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