Alexandra Fleischmann
World Health Organization
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Psychological Medicine | 2005
José Manoel Bertolote; Alexandra Fleischmann; Diego De Leo; Jafar Bolhari; Neury José Botega; Damani de Silva; Huong Tran Thi Thanh; Matthew Phillips; Lourens Schlebusch; Airi Värnik; Lakshmi Vijayakumar; Danuta Wasserman
BACKGROUND The objectives were to assess thoughts about suicide, plans to commit suicide and suicide attempts in the community, to investigate the use of health services following a suicide attempt, and to describe basic socio-cultural indices of the community. METHOD The community survey was one component of the larger WHO multisite intervention study on suicidal behaviours (SUPRE-MISS). In each site, it aimed at randomly selecting and interviewing at least 500 subjects of the general population living in the catchment area of the emergency department where the intervention component of the study was conducted. Communities of eight SUPRE-MISS sites (in Brazil, China, Estonia, India, Iran, South Africa, Sri Lanka, and Viet Nam) participated plus two additional sites from Australia and Sweden conducting similar surveys. RESULTS Suicide attempts (0.4-4.2%), plans (1.1-15.6%), and ideation (2.6-25.4%) varied by a factor of 10-14 across sites, but remained mostly within the ranges of previously published data. Depending on the site, the ratios between attempts, plans, and thoughts of suicide differed substantially. Medical attention following a suicide attempt varied between 22% and 88% of the attempts. CONCLUSIONS The idea of the suicidal process as a continuous and smooth evolution from thoughts to plans and attempts of suicide needs to be further investigated as it seems to be dependent on the cultural setting. There are indications, that the burden of undetected attempted suicide is high in different cultures; an improved response from the health sector on how to identify and support these individuals is needed.
Crisis-the Journal of Crisis Intervention and Suicide Prevention | 2004
José Manoel Bertolote; Alexandra Fleischmann; Diego De Leo; Danuta Wasserman
BACKGROUND The key role of prevention and treatment of mental disorders in the prevention of suicide is widely acknowledged. Which specific disorders need to be targeted remains to be conclusively demonstrated. AIMS To re-examine the presence of psychiatric diagnosis in cases of completed suicide from a global perspective. METHOD A review of studies reporting diagnoses of mental disorders in cases of completed suicide with or without history of admission to mental hospitals. RESULTS Most cases were from Europe and North America (82.2%). The majority (98%) of these had a diagnosis of at least one mental disorder. Among all diagnoses, mood disorders accounted for 30.2%, followed by substance-use related disorders (17.6%), schizophrenia (14.1%), and personality disorders (13.0%). CONCLUSIONS The mental health paradigm in suicide prevention covers just a part of the problem. Antisuicide strategies focusing exclusively on the identification and treatment of depression need to be reconsidered. In addition to this, other mental disorders should be targeted, in particular alcohol-use disorders and schizophrenia. More emphasis should also be placed on psychosocial and environmental interventions diminishing and counteracting stress.
Bulletin of The World Health Organization | 2008
Alexandra Fleischmann; José Manoel Bertolote; Danuta Wasserman; Diego De Leo; Jafar Bolhari; Neury José Botega; Damani de Silva; Matthew Phillips; Lakshmi Vijayakumar; Airi Värnik; Lourens Schlebusch; Huong Tran Thi Thanh
OBJECTIVE To determine whether brief intervention and contact is effective in reducing subsequent suicide mortality among suicide attempters in low and middle-income countries. METHODS Suicide attempters (n = 1867) identified by medical staff in the emergency units of eight collaborating hospitals in five culturally different sites (Campinas, Brazil; Chennai, India; Colombo, Sri Lanka; Karaj, Islamic Republic of Iran; and Yuncheng, China) participated, from January 2002 to October 2005, in a randomized controlled trial to receive either treatment as usual, or treatment as usual plus brief intervention and contact (BIC), which included patient education and follow-up. Overall, 91% completed the study. The primary study outcome measurement was death from suicide at 18-month follow-up. FINDINGS Significantly fewer deaths from suicide occurred in the BIC than in the treatment-as-usual group (0.2% versus 2.2%, respectively; chi2 = 13.83, P < 0.001). CONCLUSION This low-cost brief intervention may be an important part of suicide prevention programmes for underresourced low- and middle-income countries.
PLOS Medicine | 2011
Tarun Dua; Corrado Barbui; Nicolas Clark; Alexandra Fleischmann; Vladimir Poznyak; Mark van Ommeren; M. Taghi Yasamy; José Luis Ayuso-Mateos; Gretchen L. Birbeck; Colin Drummond; Melvyn Freeman; Panteleimon Giannakopoulos; Itzhak Levav; Isidore Obot; Olayinka Omigbodun; Vikram Patel; Michael R. Phillips; Martin Prince; Afarin Rahimi-Movaghar; Atif Rahman; Josemir W. Sander; John B. Saunders; Chiara Servili; Thara Rangaswamy; Jürgen Unützer; Peter Ventevogel; Lakshmi Vijayakumar; Graham Thornicroft; Shekhar Saxena
Shekhar Saxena and colleagues summarize the recent WHO Mental Health Gap Action Programme (mhGAP) intervention guide that provides evidence-based management recommendations for mental, neurological, and substance use (MNS) disorders.
American Journal of Orthopsychiatry | 2005
Alexandra Fleischmann; José Manoel Bertolote; Myron L. Belfer; Annette Beautrais
Suicide rates of young people are increasing in many geographic areas. There is a need to recognize more precisely the role of specific mental disorders and their comparative importance for understanding suicide and its prevention. The authors reviewed the published English-language research, where psychiatric diagnoses that met diagnostic criteria were reported, to reexamine the presence and distribution of mental disorders in cases of completed suicide among young people worldwide. The number and geographical distribution of cases were limited (N = 894 cases). The majority of cases (88.6%) had a diagnosis of at least 1 mental disorder. Mood disorders were most frequent (42.1%), followed by substance-related disorders (40.8%) and disruptive behavior disorders (20.8%). Those strategies focusing exclusively on the prevention and treatment of depression in young people need to be reconsidered. A comprehensive suicide prevention strategy among young people should target mental disorders as a whole, not depression alone, and consider contextual factors.
Psychological Medicine | 2005
Alexandra Fleischmann; José Manoel Bertolote; Diego De Leo; Neury José Botega; Michael R. Phillips; Merike Sisask; Lakshmi Vijayakumar; Kazem Malakouti; Lourens Schlebusch; Damani de Silva; Van Tuong Nguyen; Danuta Wasserman
BACKGROUND The objective was to describe patients presenting themselves at emergency-care settings following a suicide attempt in eight culturally different sites [Campinas (Brazil), Chennai (India), Colombo (Sri Lanka), Durban (South Africa), Hanoi (Viet Nam), Karaj (Iran), Tallinn (Estonia), and Yuncheng, (China)]. METHOD Subjects seen for suicide attempts, as identified by the medical staff in the emergency units of 18 collaborating hospitals were asked to participate in a 45-minute structured interview administered by trained health personnel after the patient was medically stable. RESULTS Self-poisoning was the main method of attempting suicide in all eight sites. Self-poisoning by pesticides played a particularly important role in Yuncheng (71.6% females, 61.5% males), in Colombo (43.2% males, 19.6% females), and in Chennai (33.8% males, 23.8% females). The suicide attempt resulted in danger to life in the majority of patients in Yuncheng and in Chennai (over 65%). In four of the eight sites less than one-third of subjects received any type of referral for follow-up evaluation or care. CONCLUSIONS Action for the prevention of suicide attempts can be started immediately in the sites investigated by addressing the one most important method of attempted suicide, namely self-poisoning. Regulations for the access to drugs, medicaments, pesticides, and other toxic substances need to be improved and revised regulations must be implemented by integrating the efforts of different sectors, such as health, agriculture, education, and justice. The care of patients who attempt suicide needs to include routine psychiatric and psychosocial assessment and systematic referral to professional services after discharge.
PLOS Medicine | 2010
Corrado Barbui; Tarun Dua; Mark van Ommeren; M. Taghi Yasamy; Alexandra Fleischmann; Nicolas Clark; Graham Thornicroft; Suzanne Hill; Shekhar Saxena
Corrado Barbui and colleagues describe their use and adaptation of the GRADE approach in developing the guidelines for the WHO mental health Gap Action Programme (mhGAP).
Bulletin of The World Health Organization | 2006
José Manoel Bertolote; Alexandra Fleischmann; Alexander Butchart; Nida Besbelli
In addition to its specific focus on self-directed violence, the paper by Eddleston et al. in this issue of the Bulletin highlights how intersectoral collaboration can be crucial to furthering the cause of public health. (1) With nearly 900 000 deaths from suicide every year, worldwide, (2) suicide takes more lives than homicides and wars combined; it is commonly acknowledged that this figure is an underestimation and that the real magnitude can barely be guessed. Added to these deaths are the many non-fatal suicide attempts, some of which are addressed by Eddleston et al. In the absence of national registries or reliable hospital-based systems for recording suicide attempts, a large-scale study was conducted by the WHO Regional Office for Europe to estimate the number of suicide attempts in several European cities of various sizes. (3) The findings were compared with corresponding national rates for completed suicides, and showed suicide attempt rates to be 10-40 times higher than rates for completed suicides. Projecting these figures to the global total of completed suicides would give the mind-boggling worldwide estimate of between 9-36 million suicide attempts every year. Whatever the real numbers, self-directed violence clearly constitutes a major public health challenge that health planners, policy-makers and practitioners simply cannot afford to ignore. Imprecision in recording efforts does not only affect the figures for suicide. For every real case of suicide that is misrecorded as something else (e.g. accident, stroke or cardiac arrest), another mortality category will be unduly inflated, thus distorting the entire system of mortality records. Individual studies on the reliability of suicide mortality recording have indicated that numbers of deaths may be underestimated by 30-200%. (W4) Reliable information on suicide mortality and suicide attempts is therefore not only useful for better planning and delivery of suicide prevention programmes, but will also help to provide a clearer picture of the mortality attributable to other causes, particularly those indicated above. Perhaps even less well understood is the specific link between suicide and pesticides, which is significant in rural areas generally and in Asian countries in particular. It is estimated that in the last 10 years between 60-90% of suicides in China, Malaysia, Sri Lanka, and Trinidad and Tobago were by pesticide ingestion. (W5) This led Gunnell & Eddleston to estimate that there are as many as 300 000 deaths each year from intentional pesticide poisoning in those parts of the world. (W6) More recently, WHO has received reports of a growing number of suicides due to pesticide ingestion in many other Asian countries and in Central and South American countries (e.g. Brazil, El Salvador, Guatemala, Guyana, Nicaragua and Paraguay). This may well mean that the global number of suicide deaths is considerably higher than currently estimated, and clearly makes pesticide ingestion the most common method of suicide on a worldwide basis. This new information provides clear indications of directions for action. …
American Journal of Medical Genetics Part C-seminars in Medical Genetics | 2005
José Manoel Bertolote; Alexandra Fleischmann
Suicide has been identified as a serious public health problem which is receiving increasing attention. Whereas a large number of Member States of the World Health Organization (WHO) reports on suicide mortality, no systematic national data on attempted suicide exist. Having recognized the need for comparable information about attempted suicide across different countries and cultures, WHOs Multisite Intervention Study on Suicidal Behaviors is presented.
Archives of Suicide Research | 2010
Merike Sisask; Airi Värnik; Kairi Kolves; José Manoel Bertolote; Jafar Bolhari; Neury José Botega; Alexandra Fleischmann; Lakshmi Vijayakumar; Danuta Wasserman
This cross-cultural study investigates whether religiosity assessed in three dimensions has a protective effect against attempted suicide. Community controls (n = 5484) were more likely than suicide attempters (n = 2819) to report religious denomination in Estonia (OR = 0.5) and subjective religiosity in four countries: Brazil (OR = 0.2), Estonia (OR = 0.5), Islamic Republic of Iran (OR = 0.6), and Sri Lanka (OR = 0.4). In South Africa, the effect was exceptional both for religious denomination (OR = 5.9) and subjective religiosity (OR = 2.7). No effects were found in India and Vietnam. Organizational religiosity gave controversial results. In particular, subjective religiosity (considering him/herself as religious person) may serve as a protective factor against non-fatal suicidal behavior in some cultures.