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1 x difference in risk was found for offspring suicide attempt.
2 th current suicidal ideation and/or a recent suicide attempt.
3  = .003; R2 = 0.32) based on the most recent suicide attempt.
4                    The primary outcome was a suicide attempt.
5 ly, are associated with an elevated risk for suicide attempt.
6 repeat self-harm in the 6 months following a suicide attempt.
7 at higher risk of future hospitalization for suicide attempt.
8 s and disorders, other mental disorders, and suicide attempt.
9 eek period predicted greater likelihood of a suicide attempt.
10  adoptees at high genetic risk of suicide or suicide attempt.
11 r patients were at higher risk of suicide or suicide attempt.
12 tween hormonal contraceptive use and risk of suicide attempt.
13 nd one patient in the topiramate group had a suicide attempt.
14  ideation and intent and lethality of future suicide attempts.
15 mmunity controls (n = 93) with no history of suicide attempts.
16 evere suicidal ideation and higher-lethality suicide attempts.
17 trongly associated with recent self-harm and suicide attempts.
18 anxiety, suicidal ideation, self-injury, and suicide attempts.
19           Twelve-month suicidal ideation and suicide attempts.
20  This study focused on suicidal ideation and suicide attempts.
21 sized to be related to suicidal ideation and suicide attempts.
22 fetime suicidal ideation, suicide plans, and suicide attempts.
23        IPV was also associated with incident suicide attempts.
24 ted psychopathology, psychotic symptoms, and suicide attempts.
25 hotic symptoms are at clinical high risk for suicide attempts.
26 ive disorder, dysthymia, mild depression, or suicide attempts.
27 tion in depressed patients with a history of suicide attempts.
28             IPV was associated with incident suicide attempts.
29 re was no clear evidence of association with suicide attempts.
30 nd past, intake, and follow-up predictors of suicide attempts.
31 pes of 1497 BP subjects without a history of suicide attempts.
32 ar disorder is associated with high rates of suicide attempts.
33 der, concerning the occurrence and timing of suicide attempts.
34 tion between methylphenidate and the risk of suicide attempts.
35 xual minorities experience elevated rates of suicide attempts.
36 iation between methylphenidate treatment and suicide attempts.
37 te same-sex marriage policies and adolescent suicide attempts.
38 l measurements, and detailed descriptions of suicide attempts.
39 ent methods used, they have a higher rate of suicide attempts.
40 ported events of non-suicidal self-injury as suicide attempts.
41 nterventions aimed at preventing suicide and suicide attempts.
42 eeded to further reduce death by suicide and suicide attempts.
43 zodiazepines 1.22 [1.10-1.37]), and previous suicide attempt (1.21 [1.07-1.39]) were all significantl
44 cide (OR 1.326, 95% CI 0.803-2.113; p=0.24), suicide attempts (1.057, 0.787-1.412; p=0.71), and absco
45 any eating disorder had an increased risk of suicide attempts (1.41 [1.29-1.53]).
46 nxiety disorder, and substance use disorder (suicide attempts: 1.82 [1.72-1.93]; death by suicide: 2.
47 .38, 1.07-1.79, p=0.013), and higher risk of suicide attempt (13 studies, 3422 participants; 2.25, 1.
48 n (odds ratio, 2.23 [95% CI, 2.10-2.37]) and suicide attempts (2.55 [1.95 -3.34]) among children and
49 depression, self-harm, suicide ideation, and suicide attempt), 2 externalizing problems (fighting and
50 .72-4.39), and for parental suicide attempt (suicide attempt, 3.42; 95% CI, 3.29-3.55; violent offend
51 .62; 95% CI, 3.41-3.84) and cannabis misuse (suicide attempt, 3.57; 95% CI, 3.25-3.92; violent offend
52 iagnoses of antisocial personality disorder (suicide attempt, 3.96; 95% CI, 3.72-4.21; violent offend
53  [2.1%] vs 8831 [1.0%]; 2.27, 1.96-2.62) and suicide attempts (38 [0.43%] vs 2752 [0.32%]; 1.54, 1.11
54 ed severe nausea during surgery (1 patient), suicide attempt (4 patients), and suicidal ideation (2 p
55 increased risks of psychiatric disorders and suicide attempts 5 years after repatriation.
56 ed risk (reported as odds ratio [95% CI]) of suicide attempts (5.28 [5.04-5.54]) and death by suicide
57  other illicit drugs (7.80, 4.46-13.63), and suicide attempt (6.83, 2.04-22.90).
58 Enlisted soldiers accounted for 98.6% of all suicide attempts (9650 attempters; overall rate, 377.0 [
59 irect effect of proband attempt on offspring suicide attempt, a strong effect of offspring mood disor
60 red the magnitude of trends in prevalence of suicide attempts across levels of sociodemographic and p
61 s from the 2004-2005 to 2012-2013 surveys in suicide attempts across sociodemographic and psychiatric
62 justed odds ratio 1.02 [0.61-1.69]; p=0.95), suicide attempts (adjusted prevalence ratio 1.8 [-2.4 to
63 nted HPA axis activity may increase risk for suicide attempt among individuals with psychopathology b
64 sed to model the time to hospitalization for suicide attempt among offspring who lost a parent during
65                                  The odds of suicide attempt among soldiers in a unit with 5 or more
66                                      Risk of suicide attempt among soldiers increased as the number o
67 ef CBT was effective in preventing follow-up suicide attempts among active-duty military service memb
68 al health predictors of medically documented suicide attempts among active-duty regular Army soldiers
69                 A recent overall increase in suicide attempts among adults in the United States has d
70 -in-differences analysis compared changes in suicide attempts among all public high school students b
71      Hazard ratio for incident and recurrent suicide attempts among case patients with epilepsy compa
72 an increased chance of suicidal ideation and suicide attempts among children and adolescents.
73                      In multivariate models, suicide attempts among enlisted soldiers were predicted
74 me-sex marriage with year-to-year changes in suicide attempts among high school students in 15 states
75         The mean (SE) 12-month prevalence of suicide attempts among individuals reporting ideation an
76  1 suicide attempt, and there were 548 total suicide attempts among participants.
77 has occurred and in characterizing trends in suicide attempts among sociodemographic and clinical gro
78 factors associated with prospective risk for suicide attempts among youth with bipolar disorder.
79 recent users was 1.97 (95% CI=1.85-2.10) for suicide attempt and 3.08 (95% CI=1.34-7.08) for suicide.
80  Cox regression models compared the risk for suicide attempt and other psychiatric hospitalization in
81                       Although subjects with suicide attempt and SRB have similar clinical and psycho
82 tions between hormonal contraceptive use and suicide attempt and suicide in a nationwide prospective
83 his study was to assess the relative risk of suicide attempt and suicide in users of hormonal contrac
84                   Adjusted hazard ratios for suicide attempt and suicide were estimated for users of
85 on was positively associated with subsequent suicide attempt and suicide.
86                          Risks for offspring suicide attempt and violent offending were elevated acro
87 nce rate ratios were estimated for offspring suicide attempt and violent offending.
88 rs) with a mean age of 21 years, 6,999 first suicide attempts and 71 suicides were identified.
89 a for the month before each of 9650 incident suicide attempts and an equal-probability sample of 1535
90                                              Suicide attempts and career, mental health, and demograp
91        Understanding the association between suicide attempts and deployment, as well as method and t
92 nagement protocol are effective for reducing suicide attempts and NSSI episodes.
93                    Frequency and severity of suicide attempts and NSSI episodes.
94                                              Suicide attempts and recurrent suicide attempts are asso
95  YAM was effective in reducing the number of suicide attempts and severe suicidal ideation in school-
96 is associated with greater lethality of past suicide attempts and suicidal intent and ideation.
97 ents (n=415) were assessed prospectively for suicide attempts and suicide, life events and MDE over 2
98 on has been associated with increased lethal suicide attempts and suicide.
99 ential in the lower midbrain predicts future suicide attempts and whether higher RN serotonin1A bindi
100 line personality disorder who had at least 2 suicide attempts and/or nonsuicidal self-injury (NSSI) a
101 (N = 17) and without (N = 19) a history of a suicide attempt, and 28 healthy controls matched for age
102 ivity disorder, psychosis, bipolar disorder, suicide attempt, and substance use problem) and academic
103  of 288 participants (20.9%) made at least 1 suicide attempt, and there were 548 total suicide attemp
104 s with and without locked wards) on suicide, suicide attempts, and absconding (with and without retur
105 incidents, criminal behavior, incarceration, suicide attempts, and comorbidities.
106 psychiatric hospitals to prevent absconding, suicide attempts, and death by suicide.
107 ly in those with persistent tics, history of suicide attempts, and psychiatric comorbidities.
108 ation outcomes (unintentional injury deaths, suicide attempts, and subsequent hospitalizations).
109 e is associated with incident depression and suicide attempts, and vice versa, in both women and men.
110 behaviors, including lethality and intent of suicide attempts; and suicidal ideation.
111 tes of suicidal ideation, suicide plans, and suicide attempts are 13.9%, 5.3%, and 2.4%.
112  mental disorders predicting post-enlistment suicide attempts are 31.3% for pre-enlistment onset diso
113               Suicide attempts and recurrent suicide attempts are associated with epilepsy even befor
114 gs indicate that both incident and recurrent suicide attempts are associated with incident epilepsy i
115 t approximately one-third of post-enlistment suicide attempts are associated with pre-enlistment ment
116                                              Suicide attempts are common in individuals with eating d
117                                              Suicide attempts are highly familial, although the mecha
118                                              Suicide attempts are strong predictors of suicide, a lea
119 aviors, including suicidal ideation and past suicide attempts, are frequent in bariatric surgery cand
120                         Our findings support suicide attempt as an even more lethal risk factor for c
121  controlled trials that reported suicides or suicide attempts as an outcome, irrespective of particip
122          14 pupils (0.70%) reported incident suicide attempts at the 12 month follow-up in the YAM ve
123                                              Suicide attempts at the 3- and 12-month follow-up and ac
124 mong the 701 offspring, 44 (6.3%) had made a suicide attempt before participating in the study, and 2
125 who identified as sexual minorities reported suicide attempts before implementation of same-sex marri
126                  The observed higher risk of suicide attempts before treatment may reflect emerging p
127 each in the benralizumab (pancytopenia and a suicide attempt, both considered unrelated to treatment)
128  a psychiatric hospitalization but never for suicide attempt (BPPH).
129 7.91; 95% CI, 3.61-88.82) and 34% reported a suicide attempt by 12 months (OR, 32.67; 95% CI, 10.42-1
130  reported psychotic symptoms, 14% reported a suicide attempt by 3 months (OR, 17.91; 95% CI, 3.61-88.
131 ted, and mental health), method, and time of suicide attempt by deployment status (never, currently,
132 .01; 95% CI, 2.24-45.49), and 20% reported a suicide attempt by the 12-month follow-up compared with
133             Of that subsample, 7% reported a suicide attempt by the 3-month follow-up compared with 1
134  deployment, as well as method and timing of suicide attempts, can assist in developing interventions
135 literature on insulin overdose, usually from suicide attempts, can help guide the management of iatro
136 polar disorder with and without a history of suicide attempts combines structural, diffusion tensor,
137 ood had earlier onset of hospitalization for suicide attempt compared with offspring who lost a paren
138 ession, substance dependence, and additional suicide attempts) compared with nonattempters.
139  soldier's unit as a predictor of subsequent suicide attempt, controlling for sociodemographic featur
140                        Parental history of a suicide attempt conveys a nearly 5-fold increased odds o
141 lar results were found for anorexia nervosa (suicide attempts: crude, 4.42 [4.12-4.74] vs adjusted, 1
142 sted, 2.67 [1.78-4.01]) and bulimia nervosa (suicide attempts: crude, 6.26 [5.73-6.85] vs adjusted, 1
143 s at the 3- and 12-month follow-up and acute suicide attempts (defined as those occurring in the 2 we
144  parental psychiatric disorders and parental suicide attempt, delineated from records of secondary ca
145 abis dependence, use of other illicit drugs, suicide attempt, depression, and welfare dependence).
146 to the effects of possible brain damage from suicide attempts, depressive severity, co-occurring subs
147 e (defined as psychiatric rehospitalization, suicide attempt, discontinuation or switch to other medi
148 were approximately 60% less likely to make a suicide attempt during follow-up than soldiers in treatm
149                        Relative incidence of suicide attempt during periods when patients were expose
150 -fold (95% CI, 2.5- to 3.4-fold) for a first suicide attempt during the time period before the case p
151                     The overall incidence of suicide attempts during methylphenidate treatment was 9.
152                   Assessment of incidence of suicide attempts during the follow-up period was conduct
153 , some associations, particularly predicting suicide attempt, educational attainment, and social welf
154 N=935) Olmsted County residents making index suicide attempts (first lifetime attempts reaching medic
155       We retrieved psychiatric diagnoses and suicide attempts from the Swedish patient register for t
156 ng whether a coincident national increase in suicide attempts has occurred and in characterizing tren
157 ion between traumatic brain injury (TBI) and suicide attempt have yielded conflicting results.
158 programs in reducing the number of nonlethal suicide attempts have been sparse.
159 treatment as usual (40.2%) made at least one suicide attempt (hazard ratio=0.38, 95% CI=0.16-0.87, nu
160 ng Army suicide attempts than among civilian suicide attempts highlights the potential importance of
161                                        While suicide attempt history is considered to robustly predic
162         Forty-five depressed patients with a suicide attempt history, 47 nonsuicidal depressed patien
163 th identified risk factors (such as previous suicide attempts, history of mental illness or noncompli
164                     To study time at risk to suicide attempt hospitalization among offspring of suici
165 ric disorder amplified an adoptee's risk for suicide attempt hospitalization among those adoptees at
166 rs alone placed adoptees at greater risk for suicide attempt hospitalizations.
167  disorder (HR = 24.70; 95% CI, 12.12-50.31), suicide attempts (HR = 2.72; 95% CI, 2.08-3.56), substan
168                                              Suicide attempts identified using Department of Defense
169               A history of mental illness or suicide attempt in both parents was associated with doub
170  peer victimization and suicidal ideation or suicide attempt in children or adolescents.
171 ocorticoids, the hazard ratio for suicide or suicide attempt in exposed patients was 6.89 (95% CI=4.5
172 pt conveys a nearly 5-fold increased odds of suicide attempt in offspring at risk for mood disorder,
173                 The hospitalization risk for suicide attempt in offspring who lost a parent during th
174  number of self-harm repetitions following a suicide attempt in people who complete the helpsheet and
175  Identifying the timing and risk factors for suicide attempt in soldiers requires consideration of en
176 SI) acts in the last 5 years, an NSSI act or suicide attempt in the 8 weeks before screening, and a s
177 0 participants, 25 (27.8%) made at least one suicide attempt in the interval, and most attempts occur
178 tempt in the 8 weeks before screening, and a suicide attempt in the past year.
179 on analyses examined the number of past-year suicide attempts in a soldier's unit as a predictor of s
180 of suicide attempt is influenced by previous suicide attempts in a soldier's unit is unknown.
181               Trials that had no suicides or suicide attempts in both groups were also excluded.
182 l evidence showed that psychotherapy reduced suicide attempts in high-risk adults but not adolescents
183   These results suggest an increased risk of suicide attempts in individuals with lifetime eating dis
184 havioral therapy (CBT) for the prevention of suicide attempts in military personnel.
185 ntal disorders predict post-enlistment first suicide attempts in multivariate analysis: pre-enlistmen
186                     Psychotherapy may reduce suicide attempts in some high-risk adults, but effective
187 of suicide attempt is influenced by previous suicide attempts in that soldier's unit.
188 the most comprehensive accounting to date of suicide attempts in the Army.
189 dds of suicidal ideation, suicide plans, and suicide attempts in the CGP (range of adjusted odds rati
190 I and Axis II disorders on the occurrence of suicide attempts in the general population and among ind
191 ributable risk proportion for 1 or more unit suicide attempts in the past year indicated that, if thi
192                 To describe trends in recent suicide attempts in the United States.
193                                              Suicide attempts in the US Army have risen in the past d
194                                  The rate of suicide attempts in the US Army increased sharply during
195 thology, mainly stress-related disorders and suicide attempts, in children and adults.
196 ; mean [SD] age, 40.2 [11.2] years), 15 made suicide attempts, including 2 who died by suicide.
197         Suicide attempts were defined as any suicide attempts, including death by suicide, recorded i
198 king, disability score, days unable to work, suicide attempts, intimate partner violence, and resourc
199 date, it remains unclear whether the risk of suicide attempt is due to specific mental disorders, to
200 y of other unit members, but whether risk of suicide attempt is influenced by previous suicide attemp
201       To examine whether a soldier's risk of suicide attempt is influenced by previous suicide attemp
202 ic Studies Depression Scale and report fewer suicide attempts, it does not show us that HC protects w
203                      Units with a history of suicide attempts may be important targets for preventive
204                              More than 79000 suicide attempts may have been averted during the period
205                      The primary outcome was suicide attempts (nonfatal and fatal) over the 52-week f
206  more likely to attempt suicide if 1 or more suicide attempts occurred in their unit during the past
207 ) and were less likely to report a past-year suicide attempt (odds ratio = 0.37, 95% confidence inter
208 suicide attempt was a predictor of offspring suicide attempt (odds ratio [OR], 4.79; 95% CI, 1.75-13.
209 areness programmes have been shown to reduce suicide attempts (odds ratio [OR] 0.45, 95% CI 0.24-0.85
210 ted with a significant reduction of incident suicide attempts (odds ratios [OR] 0.45, 95% CI 0.24-0.8
211 ymptoms (e.g., self-mutilation, help-seeking suicide attempts) of borderline personality disorder wer
212 uicide in the 6 months following their index suicide attempt (one in the intervention group and two i
213                                Any record of suicide attempt or completed suicide defined by discharg
214 t future documented suicidal behavior (i.e., suicide attempt or death).
215  United States enrolled adults with a recent suicide attempt or ideation and was composed of 3 sequen
216             The authors examined the risk of suicide attempt or other psychiatric hospitalization amo
217 severity, inpatient treatment, and record of suicide attempt or self-harm), and psychiatric diagnoses
218 ival models revealed no elevation in risk of suicide attempt or suicide during periods when participa
219                  Main Outcomes and Measures: Suicide attempt or suicide.
220 r evidence of an association between IPV and suicide attempts or depression and incident IPV.
221 20; 95% CI, 1.37-12.86), baseline history of suicide attempt (OR, 5.69; 95% CI, 1.94-16.74), and mood
222 s associated with a decreased probability of suicide attempts (OR 0.658, 95% CI 0.504-0.864; p=0.003)
223 had a nearly 70-fold increased odds of acute suicide attempts (OR, 67.50; 95% CI, 11.41-399.21).
224 dds ratio [OR], 5.24; 95% CI, 2.85-9.62) and suicide attempts (OR, 9.48; 95% CI, 3.98-22.62).
225 systems also had to include data on suicide, suicide attempt, or suicidal ideation.
226 omes of interest, namely suicidal behaviour (suicide, attempt, or ideation), and intermediate or seco
227                       MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Suicide attempt over prospective follow-up and past, int
228          First, impulsivity and a history of suicide attempts (particularly poorly planned ones) were
229 health utility in reducing the prevalence of suicide attempts, particularly attempts with intent to d
230 tween hormonal contraceptive use and a first suicide attempt peaked after 2 months of use.
231 proportion of high school students reporting suicide attempts, providing empirical evidence for an as
232 psychiatric consequences (including suicide, suicide attempt, psychosis, mania, depression, panic dis
233            After controlling for state-level suicide attempt rates (2008-2009), higher rates of firea
234       There was no significant difference in suicide attempt rates among individuals older than 23 ye
235 S program activities had significantly lower suicide attempt rates among youths 16 to 23 years of age
236                                              Suicide attempt rates for each county following implemen
237 d recently available state-level measures of suicide attempt rates to assess whether, and if so, to w
238                                 Furthermore, suicide attempt rates were not significantly related to
239 s may be needed to maintain the reduction in suicide attempt rates.
240 as no evidence of longer-term differences in suicide attempt rates.
241 tivities were associated with a reduction in suicide attempt rates.
242 lterations in MDD patients with a history of suicide attempts relative to MDD patients without such h
243 1.2 to -0.01 percentage points) reduction in suicide attempts, representing a 7% relative reduction i
244 tion phase showed a 5% absolute reduction in suicide attempt risk (23% vs 18%), with a relative risk
245                    Standardized estimates of suicide attempt risk for sociodemographic, service-relat
246  for careful monitoring and intervention for suicide attempt risk, especially 1 to 2 years after pare
247 he primary outcome measure was the number of suicide attempt(s) made by 3 month and 12 month follow-u
248           Cases were defined as those with a suicide attempt (SA) occurring after exposure to asthma
249  the follow-up period was conducted with the Suicide Attempt Self-Injury Interview.
250         Depressed patients with a history of suicide attempt showed bilateral abnormalities in pariet
251 iated with an increased risk for recurrence, suicide attempts, substance abuse, and functional disabi
252 m, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, suicide attempts, substance use, and criminality), acade
253 , 4.05; 95% CI, 3.72-4.39), and for parental suicide attempt (suicide attempt, 3.42; 95% CI, 3.29-3.5
254 rmation about use of hormonal contraception, suicide attempt, suicide, and potential confounding vari
255 mprovements in the frequency and severity of suicide attempts, suicide ideation, use of crisis servic
256 fficacy with regard to incidence and time to suicide attempt, survival curve analyses were conducted.
257 sibility of higher fatality rates among Army suicide attempts than among civilian suicide attempts hi
258  be more effective in preventing suicide and suicide attempts than indirect interventions that addres
259 rvention phase had significantly fewer total suicide attempts than participants in the TAU phase (inc
260 n the intervention phase had 30% fewer total suicide attempts than participants in the TAU phase.
261  adverse events were reported, including one suicide attempt that occurred during the standard treatm
262 ipants with bipolar disorder who had a prior suicide attempt (the attempter group) and 42 participant
263 participants with bipolar disorder without a suicide attempt (the nonattempter group).
264 ecause mental disorders increase the risk of suicide attempt through a general psychopathology liabil
265 1201 bipolar (BP) subjects with a history of suicide attempts to the genotypes of 1497 BP subjects wi
266                                          Six suicide attempts (two in the CBT intervention group, and
267 es among individuals who had self-reported a suicide attempt up through age 24 years (young suicide a
268 d (95% CI, 1.3- to 2.5-fold) for a recurrent suicide attempt up to and including the day that epileps
269  peer victimization and suicidal ideation or suicide attempts using meta-analysis.
270 mined whether the influence of previous unit suicide attempts varied by military occupational special
271 te logistic regression revealed that proband suicide attempt was a predictor of offspring suicide att
272            Within the OCD cohort, a previous suicide attempt was the strongest predictor of death by
273                                   The OR for suicide attempts was 1.6 (95% CI, 0.8-3.0).
274                                  The ARD for suicide attempts was also significantly larger among adu
275                         An increased risk of suicide attempts was detected during the 90-day period b
276                             The incidence of suicide attempts was higher in the period immediately be
277  preceding first treatment, the incidence of suicide attempts was not elevated (IRR, 0.78; 95% CI, 0.
278                                  The ARD for suicide attempts was significantly larger among adults a
279                           Risk estimates for suicide attempt were 1.91 (95% CI=1.79-2.03) for oral co
280 tted to a hospital in Edinburgh, UK, after a suicide attempt were deemed eligible for the study if th
281   Effects of mental disorders on the risk of suicide attempt were exerted almost exclusively through
282 emitted psychiatric disorders on the risk of suicide attempt were fully mediated by current mental di
283 ldiers with 1 previous deployment, odds of a suicide attempt were higher for those who screened posit
284 f tics beyond young adulthood and a previous suicide attempt were the strongest predictors of death b
285                                              Suicide attempts were defined as any suicide attempts, i
286  personality disorder, substance misuse, and suicide attempts were explained by factors other than vi
287                        The rates of lifetime suicide attempts were high across all proband groups, wi
288 th subsequent hospitalizations and 1.5% with suicide attempts were in the lowest 20% of the ML-predic
289                    Across deployment status, suicide attempts were more likely among soldiers who wer
290 t thoughts of death, suicidal ideation, or a suicide attempt), were assessed in young adulthood (19,
291 sorders, 191 (57.2%) of whom had also made a suicide attempt, were followed up for a mean of 5.6 year
292 treatment-refractory depression and multiple suicide attempts with an associated severe deficiency of
293             The association of previous unit suicide attempts with subsequent risk was significant wh
294 ildren and adolescents had a higher risk for suicide attempts with uncertain intent (1.43; 1.01-2.02)
295  relationship between peer victimization and suicide attempts, with a total of 70,102 participants.
296  intent to die during the past week and/or a suicide attempt within the past month.
297  prescriptions, 154 had their first recorded suicide attempt within the study period; of these indivi
298                     Self-report of 1 or more suicide attempts within the past 12 months.
299 oldiers increased as the number of past-year suicide attempts within their unit increased for combat
300 del, the population-attributable fraction of suicide attempts would be 56% to 75% for psychotic sympt

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