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Substance Use Severity Predicts Suicidal Ideation in Early Adult Emergency Department Patients: The Role of Family Support

Tarantino, Nicholas
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Abstract

Alcohol and drug abuse are strong predictors of suicide. While screening methods have proven effective at identifying and treating substance abuse in non-treatment-seeking users (e.g., screening and brief intervention [SBI]), less attention has been given to the co-occurrence of suicidality among this population, including its correlates and etiology. The current study addresses this gap by presenting data from early adult emergency department (ED) patients (mean age = 27; N = 505), screened for substance abuse and suicidal ideation. Prevalence of past year ideation was high (15%). Results demonstrated a significant and positive indirect effect of cocaine use severity on likelihood of suicidal ideation, mediated through family support. The implications for SBI practices in the ED and suicide etiology among non-treatment-seeking substance abusers are discussed.

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Date
2012-05-01
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Publisher
Research Projects
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Keywords
Substance abuse, Substance use severity, Screening and brief intervention, Emergency department, Early adult, Social support, Suicidal ideation
Citation
Tarantino, Nicholas. "Substance Use Severity Predicts Suicidal Ideation in Early Adult Emergency Department Patients: The Role of Family Support." 2012. Thesis, Georgia State University. https://doi.org/10.57709/2699221
Embargo Lift Date
2012-03-26
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