Suicide Rates Among Geriatric Persons
The causes of death among the elderly are traditionally associated with the normal aging process or what would be called natural process, diseases associated with age and the debilitations it can cause. Yet, other factors also contribute to the cause of death an individual might succumb to, widowhood, retirement, forced relocation, and/or loneliness especially around the holidays. (Huyck Hoyer 1982) Still other studies are making it clear that murder and suicide rates are increasing dramatically among the elderly. (cf., Birren, Schaie, 1977) (Nussbaum, Pecchioni, Robinson & Thompson, 2000, p. 294) Suicide was the eleventh leading cause of death among persons over the age of 65 in 1982. (Riley, 1983, p. 144) Some strides have been made and between the years 1983 and 1998 suicide averaged as the fourteenth leading cause of death for persons over the age of 65, lower than the average for all ages over those same years. (Office of Statistics and Programming, National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, CDC, 2001) When looking at this particular statistic consideration must be made for the increased incidence of disease among the over 65 population. The reality of which skews the comparison considerably.
In assessing the needs of any elderly population and community ability to assist them, on the issue of risk for suicide, the population at high risk can be seen as falling into three general categories. All of these categories increase risk of depression often a precursor to suicide. Depression and suicide risk factors are particularly evident in the geriatric population.
The first category being those persons who have had a recent loss, usually the death of a spouse or child but could also be a loss like a home or possessions:
There had been considerable research on the effects of loss of spouse in old age, especially through widowhood. Studies have found that persons without a spouse have lower morale (Gurin et al., 1960; Kutner, 1956), have lower incomes (U.S. Census), have higher rates of institutionalization (Palmore, 1976b), and higher mortality and suicide rates. (Palmore, 1981, p. 79)
This sort of depression is normal in association with the natural grief process associated with loss and only becomes problematic when prolonged to a degree that it significantly impairs the individual's quality of life. It then becomes clinically necessary to treat and treatment is especially necessary when that individual shows suicidal tendencies.
The second general category is people who have just received an unpleasant medical diagnosis, a terminal diagnosis or a debilitating chronic diagnosis. Impending issues of dependency or chronic physical discomfort or pain are significant factors in this category. The chances for the occurrence of such diagnoses naturally increase as one ages. Once again this depression linked to a life event is normal and does not become abnormal until the time that it affects the person's quality of life.
The third category is a category that includes the group who might be more closely associated with true clinical depression, regardless of other environmental factors they seem to feel a general lack of usefulness or purpose that elicits feelings of depression and could result in higher risk for suicidal thoughts or actions. "Organically-based major depression, also referred to as primary depression, results from various biological and chemical changes in the brain and nervous systems or from changes in the endocrine system." (Osgood, Brant & Lipman, 1991, p. 101)
Recent investigations of mental illness after the age of sixty have reemphasized the close link between depressive illness and old age, and recent psychiatric studies of cases of attempted suicide have also demonstrated the significance of depressive illness as the common setting of suicidal acts in this age group. At all ages, both individual and social factors contribute to the genesis of suicide. In old age, individual factors are the more important, and mental illness of a clearly recognizable kind plays a leading role. (Menninger, 1957, p. 144) person suffering form organic depression would nearly always benefit from mental health treatment but once again it becomes imperative under conditions of severer life impairment.
IR.C. Batchelor, M.B., D.P.M., F.R.C.P.Ed Physician Superintendent, Dundee Royal Mental Hospital; Lecturer in Clinical Psychiatry, University of St. Andrews, Scotland in his contributing chapter "Suicide in Old Age" of the book Clues to Suicide can answer the question of the necessity of this study. In this chapter Batchelor discusses the possible layman dismissal of the aged as a population at high risk for suicide. Conjecturing that an uninformed person might think that the elderly are less likely to commit an...
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