Lakshmi Vijayakumar
University of Melbourne
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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.
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.
Crisis-the Journal of Crisis Intervention and Suicide Prevention | 2005
Lakshmi Vijayakumar; Sujit John; Jane Pirkis; Harvey Whiteford
The majority of studies on risk factors for suicide have been conducted in developed countries, and less work has been done to systematically profile risk factors in developing countries. The current paper presents a selective review of sociodemographic, clinical, and environmental/situational risk factors in developing countries. Taken together, the evidence suggests that the profiles of risk factors in developing countries demonstrate some differences from those in developed countries. In some developing countries, at least, being female, living in a rural area, and holding religious beliefs that sanction suicide may be of more relevance to suicide risk than these factors are in developed countries. Conversely, being single or having a history of mental illness may be of less relevance. Risk factors that appear to be universal include youth or old age, low socioeconomic standing, substance use, and previous suicide attempts. Recent stressful life events play a role in both developing and developed countries, although their nature may differ (e.g., social change may have more of an influence in the former). Likewise, access to means heightens risk in both, but the specific means may vary (e.g., access to pesticides is of more relevance in developing countries). These findings have clear implications for suicide prevention, suggesting that preventive efforts that have shown promise in developed countries may need to be tailored differently to address the risk factor profile of developing countries.
Crisis-the Journal of Crisis Intervention and Suicide Prevention | 2005
Lakshmi Vijayakumar; K. Nagaraj; Jane Pirkis; Harvey Whiteford
OBJECTIVE Suicide is a global public health problem, but relatively little epidemiological investigation of the phenomenon has occurred in developing countries. This paper aims to (1) examine the availability of rate data in developing countries, (2) provide a description of the frequency and distribution of suicide in those countries for which data are available, and (3) explore the relationship between country-level socioeconomic factors and suicide rates. It is accompanied by two companion papers that consider risk factors and preventive efforts associated with suicide in developing countries, respectively. METHOD Using World Health Organization data, we calculated the average annual male, female, and total suicide rates during the 1990s for individual countries and regions (classified according to the Human Development Index [HDI]), and examined the association between a range of socioeconomic indicators and suicide rates. RESULTS For reasons of data availability, we concentrated on medium HDI countries. Suicide rates in these countries were variable. They were generally comparable with those in high HDI countries from the same region, with some exceptions. High education levels, high telephone density, and high per capita levels of cigarette consumption were associated with high suicide rates; high levels of inequality were associated with low suicide rates. CONCLUSION Epidemiological investigations of this kind have the potential to inform suicide prevention efforts in developing countries, and should be encouraged.
The Lancet | 2016
Vikram Patel; Dan Chisholm; Rachana Parikh; Fiona J. Charlson; Louisa Degenhardt; Tarun Dua; Alize J. Ferrari; Steve Hyman; Ramanan Laxminarayan; Carol Levin; Crick Lund; Maria Elena Medina Mora; Inge Petersen; James Scott; Rahul Shidhaye; Lakshmi Vijayakumar; Graham Thornicroft; Harvey Whiteford
The burden of mental, neurological, and substance use (MNS) disorders increased by 41% between 1990 and 2010 and now accounts for one in every 10 lost years of health globally. This sobering statistic does not take into account the substantial excess mortality associated with these disorders or the social and economic consequences of MNS disorders on affected persons, their caregivers, and society. A wide variety of effective interventions, including drugs, psychological treatments, and social interventions, can prevent and treat MNS disorders. At the population-level platform of service delivery, best practices include legislative measures to restrict access to means of self-harm or suicide and to reduce the availability of and demand for alcohol. At the community-level platform, best practices include life-skills training in schools to build social and emotional competencies. At the health-care-level platform, we identify three delivery channels. Two of these delivery channels are especially relevant from a public health perspective: self-management (eg, web-based psychological therapy for depression and anxiety disorders) and primary care and community outreach (eg, non-specialist health worker delivering psychological and pharmacological management of selected disorders). The third delivery channel, hospital care, which includes specialist services for MNS disorders and first-level hospitals providing other types of services (such as general medicine, HIV, or paediatric care), play an important part for a smaller proportion of cases with severe, refractory, or emergency presentations and for the integration of mental health care in other health-care channels, respectively. The costs of providing a significantly scaled up package of specified cost-effective interventions for prioritised MNS disorders in low-income and lower-middle-income countries is estimated at US
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
3-4 per head of population per year. Since a substantial proportion of MNS disorders run a chronic and disabling course and adversely affect household welfare, intervention costs should largely be met by government through increased resource allocation and financial protection measures (rather than leaving households to pay out-of-pocket). Moreover, a policy of moving towards universal public finance can also be expected to lead to a far more equitable allocation of public health resources across income groups. Despite this evidence, less than 1% of development assistance for health and government spending on health in low-income and middle-income countries is allocated to the care of people with these disorders. Achieving the health gains associated with prioritised interventions will require not just financial resources, but committed and sustained efforts to address a range of other barriers (such as paucity of human resources, weak governance, and stigma). Ultimately, the goal is to massively increase opportunities for people with MNS disorders to access services without the prospect of discrimination or impoverishment and with the hope of attaining optimal health and social outcomes.
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
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.
The Canadian Journal of Psychiatry | 2000
Antoon A. Leenaars; Chris Cantor; John Connolly; Marlene EchoHawk; Danute Gailiene; Zhao Xiong He; Natalia Kokorina; David Lester; Andrew Lopatin; Mario Rodriguez; Lourens Schlebusch; Yoshitomo Takahashi; Lakshmi Vijayakumar; Susanne Wenckstern
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.
Crisis-the Journal of Crisis Intervention and Suicide Prevention | 2005
Lakshmi Vijayakumar; Jane Pirkis; Harvey Whiteford
Background: Suicide and suicidal behaviour are multifaceted events requiring complex solutions. Controlling the environment is a neglected solution, despite strong support for this approach from the World Health Organization (WHO). Method To discuss this approach from a global view, this review is written by authors from various cultures: American, Australian, Canadian, Chinese, Cuban, Dutch, Indian, Irish, Japanese, Lithuanian, Native North American, Russian, and South African. Results We examine gun control to illustrate the environmental control approach; however, the worldwide diversity of suicide methods calls for diverse responses. Further, controlling the environment encompasses more than restricting the means of suicide, which we illustrate with examples of toned-down media reports and restricted medicine availability. Conclusions Controlling the environment may be a viable strategy for preventing suicide, although research shows that few clinicians implement such approaches.