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Longitudinal Risk for Suicidal Self-Directed Violence Among Veterans With Cancer - PubMed

an hour ago
  • #suicidal behavior
  • #cancer patients
  • #veterans health
  • Patients with cancer have higher rates of suicidal self-directed violence (SSDV) than the general population.
  • A study of 292,271 veterans with cancer found 2,400 SSDV events (1%), with an overall rate of 203 per 100,000 person-years.
  • Poisoning (e.g., opioids) was the most common method, accounting for 26% of attempts.
  • Highest SSDV risks were associated with cancers of the central nervous system (CNS), pancreas, head and neck, liver/biliary system, and thyroid.
  • High SSDV rates were also linked to severe frailty, advanced cancer, chronic mental illness, and high pain scores.
  • Demographic factors like younger age (≤45 years), female sex, and American Indian/Alaska Native race showed elevated rates of nonfatal attempts.
  • Increased hazards for SSDV were found for Asian veterans, unmarried veterans, those with CNS or head and neck cancer, and advanced cancer.
  • Risk decreased over time post-diagnosis but remained elevated for younger veterans, unmarried veterans, those with CNS cancer, and advanced cancer up to 5 years later.
  • The study highlights the need for systematic tracking of all suicidal behaviors and tailored screening/prevention strategies in cancer care.