Often, the decision to commit suicide is influenced by
several factors that overlap and reinforce each other. Often, it is also
impossible to establish for what reason a person took his/her life. Risk
factors for suicidal behaviour can be divided into clinical, social and
psychological factors.
Suicide: Clinical Factors
Do suicides have a mental illness? Many people ask this
question, which is often true, but not always. According to Polish police
statistics, the two most common causes of suicide are family disagreements and
mental illness.
Depression
The mental illness that affects the risk of suicide the most
is depression. It is estimated that two-thirds of suicides suffer from
depression, and about 15% of people with depression decide to end their lives.
Patients who also have insomnia are at greater risk.
Contrary to appearances, the most severe depression does not
mean the most significant risk of taking your life. You need some determination
and energy to kill yourself. Patients with intense depression, having no
strength for anything, also do not have the power to commit suicide. Therefore,
a more significant risk may be when a person is beginning to recover from
depression theoretically. People who have recently been diagnosed with
depression are also at greater risk. People who struggle with this disease for longer
learn to live with it and less often decide to end their lives.
Schizophrenia
The risk of committing suicide is exceptionally high in
patients who suffer from persistent auditory hallucinations. Sometimes such
persons still hear “voices” telling them to kill themselves and eventually
succumb to these commands. However, even if the “voices” do not command
suicide, they can be challenging to deal with, and sometimes suicide seems to the
patient the only escape.
As with depression, those recently diagnosed with the
disease are at greater risk than those with schizophrenia for many years.
Moreover, schizophrenia is often accompanied by depression, which may be an
additional risk factor.
Addiction
At least one-third of suicides abuse psychoactive
substances. The most common addiction is alcoholism, and suicides are often
committed under the influence of this substance. The relationship between
alcoholism and the risk of suicide is not straightforward. Alcohol can
indirectly affect the risk of suicide by causing family conflict and loss of
support from loved ones. Still, the cognitive and physiological changes caused
by long-term alcohol abuse may also play a role. Alcoholics who commit suicide
often lose an essential person shortly before their death or have experienced
an interpersonal conflict or other personal crisis.
Personality disorders
Personality disorders approximately seven times increase the
risk of taking one’s own life. People with borderline personality disorder,
characterized by, e.g. impulsiveness, frequent feeling of emptiness, fear of
abandonment, and extreme and ambivalent emotions, are at particular risk.
Suicide: Social Factors
Human, as social being, needs support and close
relationships. This is especially true when he experiences difficulties in
life. People who have whom to turn to in stressful and difficult situations and
know that they are not alone with their problems cope better and are less
likely to say that the only way out is death.
As I mentioned above, crises in social relations, such as
family conflicts, are among the most common causes of suicide. The loss of a
loved one may also lead to such an act. The more a man depended on the person
he/she lost and the less support other people provided him/her, the greater the
risk of suicide.
Suicide: Psychological Factors
Edwin Shneidman distinguished ten commonalities in suicides:
Seek a solution – Suicides often find themselves in
situations they cannot solve. The only option seems to be suicide. Therefore,
shortly before taking his life, a suicide often feels calm and improves his
mood. After all, he no longer has to worry about how to get out of his problems;
he has found a solution …
Cessation of consciousness – A person who commits suicide
escapes from problems and mental pain, guilt, or other challenging emotions.
Intolerable psychological pain – According to Shneidman,
intolerable psychological pain is the pain of feeling pain. It’s an
overwhelming emotion for which there is no cure, and sometimes suicide seems
like the only cure that can relieve suffering.
Frustrated psychological needs – One of the causes of
suicide is unmet needs, such as love, understanding, and achievement. An unmet
need for achievement can be especially true of perfectionists. This trait is
often associated with suicidal ideation because perfectionists find living up
to their own expectations challenging.
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