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Wray Herbert

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Suicide Prevention: Can a New Technology Help?

Posted: 05/18/10 09:55 AM ET

Suicide is both disturbing and perplexing to survivors, in part because it is so unpredictable. People who are intent on killing themselves often conceal their thoughts or outright deny them, so family and friends are left puzzling over warning signs they might have missed.

Even experienced clinical judgment often misses the mark. As a result, suicide experts have long hoped and searched for a clear behavioral marker of suicide risk. Now they may have found one. Harvard University scientists are reporting that a tool widely used for probing unconscious thoughts might be used to spot suicidal intent--even if the suicidal mind is in denial--offering new hope for timely intervention to keep people alive.

Psychological scientists Matthew Nock and Mahzarin Banaji (working with colleagues at both Harvard and nearby Massachusetts General Hospital) decided to adapt a decade-old test called the Implicit Association Test, or IAT, to plumb for warning signs of suicide. Specifically, he wanted to see if people who are suicidal might have stronger implicit associations between themselves and death--associations that might point toward self-destructive intentions. To find out, he tested 157 people seeking treatment in a psychiatric emergency room. The patients were all emotionally distressed, but only some were in the hospital because of attempted suicide. The scientists wanted to see if the IAT could distinguish those who had attempted suicide from those who had not.

The IAT is a reaction time test. During their hospital stay, often while sitting in bed, the patients very rapidly classified words on a computer screen, words like: lifeless, thrive, myself, deceased, they, theirs, survive, breathing. And so forth. The idea is to see how rapidly patients connect identity-related words to either life or death words. And the findings were unambiguous. As reported in the April issue of the journal Psychological Science, patients who had attempted suicide prior to admission had much stronger unconscious associations between self and death.

But the study didn't end there. Nock followed all the patients for six months to see how they fared, and he found that the patients with a powerful self-death association in the hospital had a six-fold increase in later suicide attempts. Six-fold is a dramatic difference, and what's more, the unconscious associations were a much better suicide predictor than depression, previous suicide attempts, or the intuition of the attending clinician.

What about the patients' own predictions? Fourteen of the emergency patients attempted suicide within six months of leaving the hospital. Their self-evaluations were an indicator of their future risk, but an imperfect indicator. The IAT results were a better prognosticator even than the patients' self-evaluations. This suggests that unconscious thoughts might be a useful detector and predictor of intentions that patients are reluctant to discuss--or intentions of which they themselves are unaware.

 
 
 
Suicide is both disturbing and perplexing to survivors, in part because it is so unpredictable. People who are intent on killing themselves often conceal their thoughts or outright deny them, so famil...
Suicide is both disturbing and perplexing to survivors, in part because it is so unpredictable. People who are intent on killing themselves often conceal their thoughts or outright deny them, so famil...
 
 
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12:07 PM on 05/18/2010
Very interesting study Wray. I hope it can help those who are walking through that dark valley. I've been there myself and feel for anyone going through it. One night during a period of great depression I had an awful dream of climbing a great mountain all alone. It was cold as hell and I was exhausted. When I finally found a place to rest it crumbled beneath my feet and I was left dangling in my harness. I looked up at the mountain, and although I had been climbing for so long, it still towered forever above me. Then I turned and looked into the darkness below; took the knife from my pocket and cut the rope. When I woke up this verse immediately came into my mind.

The Mountain

My life is a mountain
Of sorrow and regret
That I have grown to weak
And weary to climb.
Perhaps...perhaps it's time,
To cut the rope
And just...fall away.

I later completed the poem with arguments against suicide and finished it like this...

And I must admit
That when the sky is clear,
And the sunlight reflects
Off all the majestic
Snow capped peaks,
Stretched out in a row,
I feel such glorious rapture
At the beauty of it all.

And so...on second thought,
Perhaps I'll just fold up the knife,
And put it away,
And just...keep on climbing that mountain
And hope...for a brighter day.