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Personality of late- and early-onset elderly suicide attempters

  • Anna Szuecs
  • , Katalin Szanto
  • , Aidan G. C. Wright
  • , Alexandre Y. Dombrovski

Research output: Contribution to JournalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Objectives
While suicidal behavior often manifests in adolescence and early adulthood, some people first attempt suicide in late life, often with remarkable lethal intent and determination. Given these individuals' more adaptive functioning earlier in life, they may possess traits that hinder adjustment to aging, such as high conscientiousness, rather than impulsive-aggressive traits associated with suicidal behavior in younger adults.

Methods
A cross-sectional case-control study was conducted in older adults aged ≥50 (mean: 65), divided into early- and late-onset attempters (age at first attempt ≤ or >50, mean: 31 vs 61), suicide ideators as well as non-suicidal depressed and healthy controls. Personality was assessed in terms of the five-factor model (FFM, n = 200) and five DSM personality disorders analyzed on the trait level as continuous scores (PDs, n = 160). Given our starting hypothesis about late-onset attempters, the FFM dimension conscientiousness was further tested on the subcomponent level.

Results
All clinical groups displayed more maladaptive profiles than healthy subjects. Compared to depressed controls, higher neuroticism, and borderline traits characterized both suicide ideators and early-onset attempters, while only early-onset attempters further displayed lower extraversion and higher antisocial traits. Late-onset attempters were similar to depressed controls on most measures, but scored higher than them on orderliness, a conscientiousness subcomponent.

Conclusions
While neuroticism, introversion, and cluster B traits are prominent in early-onset suicidal behavior, late-onset cases generally lack these features. In contrast, higher levels of orderliness in late-onset suicidal behavior are compatible with the age-selective maladjustment hypothesis.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)384-395
Number of pages12
JournalInternational Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry
Volume35
Issue number4
Early online date1 Jan 2020
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Apr 2020

Funding

The authors acknowledge Laura Kenneally and Maria Alessi for help with the manuscript, Timothy Allen for his comments on the paper, Joshua Feldmiller for managing the data, and Amanda Collier, Michelle Perry, and Melissa Milbert for their work on data collection. This work was supported by the National Institute of Mental Health, MD (A.D., grant numbers R01MH048463 and R01MH100095; K.S., grant number R01MH085651).

FundersFunder number
National Institute of Mental HealthR01MH048463, R01MH085651, R01MH100095
National Institute of Mental Health

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