10 results on '"Margreet, Ten Have"'
Search Results
2. Context v. algorithm: evidence that a transdiagnostic framework of contextual clinical characterization is of more clinical value than categorical diagnosis
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Jim van Os, Bart P. F. Rutten, Maarten Bak, Sinan Guloksuz, Margreet ten Have, Saskia van Dorsselaer, Bochao D. Lin, Nicole Gunther, Ron de Graaf, Lotta-Katrin Pries, Gunter Kenis, Jurjen J. Luykx, RS: MHeNs - R2 - Mental Health, MUMC+: MA Psychiatrie (3), MUMC+: Hersen en Zenuw Centrum (3), Psychiatrie & Neuropsychologie, RS: MHeNs - R3 - Neuroscience, MUMC+: MA Niet Med Staf Psychiatrie (9), RS-Research Line Clinical psychology (part of UHC program), and Department of Clinical Psychology
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DISORDERS ,Context (language use) ,Characterization (mathematics) ,computer.software_genre ,DSM ,PSYCHOSIS ,MENTAL-HEALTH SURVEY ,Diagnosis ,genetics ,Categorical variable ,Applied Psychology ,GENERAL-POPULATION ,UTILITY ,business.industry ,PSYCHOPATHOLOGY ,NEED ,CARE ,CHILDHOOD TRAUMA ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,depression ,Clinical value ,symptoms ,Artificial intelligence ,business ,Psychology ,computer ,mental health ,Natural language processing - Abstract
BackgroundA transdiagnostic and contextual framework of ‘clinical characterization’, combining clinical, psychopathological, sociodemographic, etiological, and other personal contextual data, may add clinical value over and above categorical algorithm-based diagnosis.MethodsPrediction of need for care and health care outcomes was examined prospectively as a function of the contextual clinical characterization diagnostic framework in a prospective general population cohort (n = 6646 at baseline), interviewed four times between 2007 and 2018 (NEMESIS-2). Measures of need, service use, and use of medication were predicted as a function of any of 13 DSM-IV diagnoses, both separately and in combination with clinical characterization across multiple domains: social circumstances/demographics, symptom dimensions, physical health, clinical/etiological factors, staging, and polygenic risk scores (PRS). Effect sizes were expressed as population attributable fractions.ResultsAny prediction of DSM-diagnosis in relation to need and outcome in separate models was entirely reducible to components of contextual clinical characterization in joint models, particularly the component of transdiagnostic symptom dimensions (a simple score of the number of anxiety, depression, mania, and psychosis symptoms) and staging (subthreshold, incidence, persistence), and to a lesser degree clinical factors (early adversity, family history, suicidality, slowness at interview, neuroticism, and extraversion), and sociodemographic factors. Clinical characterization components in combination predicted more than any component in isolation. PRS did not meaningfully contribute to any clinical characterization model.ConclusionA transdiagnostic framework of contextual clinical characterization is of more value to patients than a categorical system of algorithmic ordering of psychopathology.
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- 2021
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3. Bidirectional relationships between cannabis use, anxiety and depressive symptoms in the mediation of the association with psychotic experience: further support for an affective pathway to psychosis
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Rajiv Radhakrishnan, Lotta-Katrin Pries, Gamze Erzin, Margreet ten Have, Ron de Graaf, Saskia van Dorsselaer, Nicole Gunther, Maarten Bak, Bart P. F. Rutten, Jim van Os, Sinan Guloksuz, Psychiatry 1, RS: MHeNs - R2 - Mental Health, RS: MHeNs - R3 - Neuroscience, MUMC+: MA Psychiatrie (3), Psychiatrie & Neuropsychologie, and MUMC+: Hersen en Zenuw Centrum (3)
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Psychiatry and Mental health ,Applied Psychology - Abstract
Background Empirical evidence suggests that people use cannabis to ameliorate anxiety and depressive symptoms, yet cannabis also acutely worsens psychosis and affective symptoms. However, the temporal relationship between cannabis use, anxiety and depressive symptoms and psychotic experiences (PE) in longitudinal studies is unclear. This may be informed by examination of mutually mediating roles of cannabis, anxiety and depressive symptoms in the emergence of PE. Methods Data were derived from the second longitudinal Netherlands Mental Health Survey and Incidence Study. Mediation analysis was performed to examine the relationship between cannabis use, anxiety/depressive symptoms and PE, using KHB logit in STATA while adjusting for age, sex and education status. Results Cannabis use was found to mediate the relationship between preceding anxiety, depressive symptoms and later PE incidence, but the indirect contribution of cannabis use was small (for anxiety: % of total effect attributable to cannabis use = 1.00%; for depression: % of total effect attributable to cannabis use = 1.4%). Interestingly, anxiety and depressive symptoms were found to mediate the relationship between preceding cannabis use and later PE incidence to a greater degree (% of total effect attributable to anxiety = 17%; % of total effect attributable to depression = 37%). Conclusion This first longitudinal cohort study examining the mediational relationship between cannabis use, anxiety/depressive symptoms and PE, shows that there is a bidirectional relationship between cannabis use, anxiety/depressive symptoms and PE. However, the contribution of anxiety/depressive symptoms as a mediator was greater than that of cannabis.
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- 2022
4. Evidence, and replication thereof, that molecular-genetic and environmental risks for psychosis impact through an affective pathway
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Javier González-Peñas, Berna Binnur Akdede, Estela Jiménez-López, Silvia Amoretti, Sinan Guloksuz, Pilar A. Saiz, Burçin Cihan, Sanja Andric Petrovic, Miguel Bernardo, Alexander Richards, Meram Can Saka, Güvem Gümüş-Akay, Jose Luis Santos, Semra Ulusoy Kaymak, Tolga Binbay, Jurjen J. Luykx, Halis Ulaş, Julio Sanjuán, Gisela Mezquida, Berna Yalınçetin, Manuel Arrojo, Philippe Delespaul, Nadja P. Maric, Julio Bobes, Alp Üçok, Marina Mihaljevic, Gonzalo López, Eduardo J. Aguilar, Maarten Bak, Eylem Sahin Cankurtaran, Tijana Mirjanic, Bochao D. Lin, Michael Conlon O'Donovan, Cem Atbaşoğlu, Köksal Alptekin, Saskia van Dorsselaer, Vesile Altınyazar, Lotta-Katrin Pries, Gunter Kenis, Angel Carracedo, Ron de Graaf, Margreet ten Have, María Paz García-Portilla, Jim van Os, Mara Parellada, Bart P. F. Rutten, Celso Arango, Haldun Soygür, RS: MHeNs - R2 - Mental Health, MUMC+: MA Psychiatrie (3), MUMC+: Hersen en Zenuw Centrum (3), Psychiatrie & Neuropsychologie, Psychiatry 1, RS: MHeNs - R3 - Neuroscience, MUMC+: MA Niet Med Staf Psychiatrie (9), Basic Neuroscience 1, and MUMC+: VPK Flexteam Calamiteiten (9)
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Risk ,Multifactorial Inheritance ,Psychosis ,Hallucinations ,Affective pathway ,CLINICAL PSYCHOSIS ,NEGATIVE SYMPTOMS ,Delusions ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,MENTAL-HEALTH SURVEY ,childhood adversity ,Affective dysregulation ,Humans ,Medicine ,genetics ,psychosis ,Genetic risk ,Applied Psychology ,1ST EPISODE PSYCHOSIS ,GENERAL-POPULATION ,business.industry ,PSYCHIATRIC-DISORDERS ,SHORT-FORM ,Absolute risk reduction ,NETWORK APPROACH ,Ideation ,medicine.disease ,CHILDHOOD TRAUMA ,030227 psychiatry ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Psychotic Disorders ,Schizophrenia ,SCHIZOPHRENIA SPECTRUM DISORDERS ,Polygenic risk score ,business ,environment ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Schizophrenia spectrum ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
BackgroundThere is evidence that environmental and genetic risk factors for schizophrenia spectrum disorders are transdiagnostic and mediated in part through a generic pathway of affective dysregulation.MethodsWe analysed to what degree the impact of schizophrenia polygenic risk (PRS-SZ) and childhood adversity (CA) on psychosis outcomes was contingent on co-presence of affective dysregulation, defined as significant depressive symptoms, in (i) NEMESIS-2 (n = 6646), a representative general population sample, interviewed four times over nine years and (ii) EUGEI (n = 4068) a sample of patients with schizophrenia spectrum disorder, the siblings of these patients and controls.ResultsThe impact of PRS-SZ on psychosis showed significant dependence on co-presence of affective dysregulation in NEMESIS-2 [relative excess risk due to interaction (RERI): 1.01, p = 0.037] and in EUGEI (RERI = 3.39, p = 0.048). This was particularly evident for delusional ideation (NEMESIS-2: RERI = 1.74, p = 0.003; EUGEI: RERI = 4.16, p = 0.019) and not for hallucinatory experiences (NEMESIS-2: RERI = 0.65, p = 0.284; EUGEI: −0.37, p = 0.547). A similar and stronger pattern of results was evident for CA (RERI delusions and hallucinations: NEMESIS-2: 3.02, p < 0.001; EUGEI: 6.44, p < 0.001; RERI delusional ideation: NEMESIS-2: 3.79, p < 0.001; EUGEI: 5.43, p = 0.001; RERI hallucinatory experiences: NEMESIS-2: 2.46, p < 0.001; EUGEI: 0.54, p = 0.465).ConclusionsThe results, and internal replication, suggest that the effects of known genetic and non-genetic risk factors for psychosis are mediated in part through an affective pathway, from which early states of delusional meaning may arise.
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- 2020
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5. Recurrence of anxiety disorders and its predictors in the general population
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Ron de Graaf, Neeltje M. Batelaan, Margreet ten Have, Carmen van Geel, Willemijn D. Scholten, Anton J. L. M. van Balkom, Psychiatry, and APH - Mental Health
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education.field_of_study ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Proportional hazards model ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Population ,medicine.disease ,Neuroticism ,Mental health ,030227 psychiatry ,03 medical and health sciences ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,0302 clinical medicine ,Health care ,Medicine ,Anxiety ,medicine.symptom ,business ,education ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Applied Psychology ,Anxiety disorder - Abstract
BackgroundAnxiety disorders frequently recur in clinical populations, but the risk of recurrence of anxiety disorders is largely unknown in the general population. In this study, recurrence of anxiety and its predictors were studied in a large cohort of the adult general population.MethodsBaseline, 3-year and 6-year follow-up data were derived from the Netherlands Mental Health Survey and Incidence Study-2 (NEMESIS-2). Respondents (N = 468) who had been in remission for at least a year prior to baseline were included. Recurrence was assessed at 3 and 6 years after baseline, using the Composite International Diagnostic Interview version 3.0. Cumulative recurrence rates were estimated using the number of years since remission of the last anxiety disorder. Furthermore, Cox regression analyses were conducted to investigate predictors of recurrence, using a broad range of putative predictors.ResultsThe estimated cumulative recurrence rate was 2.1% at 1 year, 6.6% at 5 years, 10.6% at 10 years, and 16.2% at 20 years. Univariate regression analyses predicted a shorter time to recurrence for several variables, of which younger age at interview, parental psychopathology, neuroticism and a current depressive disorder remained significant in the, age and gender-adjusted, multivariable regression analysis.ConclusionsRecurrence of anxiety disorders in the general population is common and the risk of recurrence extends over a lengthy period of time. In clinical practice, alertness to recurrence, monitoring of symptoms, and quick access to health care in case of recurrence are needed.
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- 2021
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6. Interaction between environmental and familial affective risk impacts psychosis admixture in states of affective dysregulation
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Sinan Guloksuz, Christian Rauschenberg, Maarten Bak, Margreet ten Have, Rajiv Radhakrishnan, Lotta-Katrin Pries, Reininghaus U, Ron de Graaf, Jim van Os, Saskia van Dorsselaer, Nicole Gunther, Psychiatrie & Neuropsychologie, RS: MHeNs - R2 - Mental Health, Promovendi MHN, RS: MHeNs School for Mental Health and Neuroscience, MUMC+: Hersen en Zenuw Centrum (3), Department Clinical Psychology, and RS-Research Line Clinical psychology (part of IIESB program)
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Male ,cannabis ,DISORDER ,Bipolar Disorder ,Urban Population ,STRESS-REACTIVITY ,0302 clinical medicine ,Adverse Childhood Experiences ,Affective dysregulation ,SCHIZOPHRENIA ,risk factors ,ANXIETY ,Longitudinal Studies ,Family history ,familial risk ,Applied Psychology ,psychoses ,Netherlands ,education.field_of_study ,biology ,Middle Aged ,urbanicity ,AFFECTIVE PATHWAY ,Anxiety Disorders ,population survey ,CANNABIS USE ,EXPERIENCES ,CHILDHOOD TRAUMA ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Anxiety ,Female ,Marijuana Use ,Disease Susceptibility ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,Psychopathology ,Clinical psychology ,Adult ,Risk ,Psychosis ,Adolescent ,Population ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,MENTAL-HEALTH SURVEY ,childhood adversity ,medicine ,Humans ,education ,Aged ,Depressive Disorder ,NETWORK APPROACH ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Health Surveys ,Mental health ,030227 psychiatry ,Psychotic Disorders ,Gene-Environment Interaction ,Cannabis ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
BackgroundEvidence suggests that cannabis use, childhood adversity, and urbanicity, in interaction with proxy measures of genetic risk, may facilitate onset of psychosis in the sense of early affective dysregulation becoming ‘complicated’ by, first, attenuated psychosis and, eventually, full-blown psychotic symptoms.MethodsData were derived from three waves of the second Netherlands Mental Health Survey and Incidence Study (NEMESIS-2). The impact of environmental risk factors (cannabis use, childhood adversity, and urbanicity) was analyzed across severity levels of psychopathology defined by the degree to which affective dysregulation was ‘complicated’ by low-grade psychotic experiences (‘attenuated psychosis’ – moderately severe) and, overt psychotic symptoms leading to help-seeking (‘clinical psychosis’ – most severe). Familial and non-familial strata were defined based on family history of (mostly) affective disorder and used as a proxy for genetic risk in models of family history × environmental risk interaction.ResultsIn proxy gene–environment interaction analysis, childhood adversity and cannabis use, and to a lesser extent urbanicity, displayed greater-than-additive risk if there was also evidence of familial affective liability. In addition, the interaction contrast ratio grew progressively greater across severity levels of psychosis admixture (none, attenuated psychosis, clinical psychosis) complicating affective dysregulation.ConclusionKnown environmental risks interact with familial evidence of affective liability in driving the level of psychosis admixture in states of early affective dysregulation in the general population, constituting an affective pathway to psychosis. There is interest in decomposing family history of affective liability into the environmental and genetic components that underlie the interactions as shown here.
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- 2019
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7. Reasoning bias, working memory performance and a transdiagnostic phenotype of affective disturbances and psychotic experiences in the general population
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Reininghaus U, Saskia van Dorsselaer, Jim van Os, Maarten Bak, Claudia J. P. Simons, Ron de Graaf, Sinan Guloksuz, Nicole Gunther, Christian Rauschenberg, Rajiv Radhakrishnan, Lotta-Katrin Pries, Margreet ten Have, Department Clinical Psychology, RS-Research Line Clinical psychology (part of IIESB program), Psychiatrie & Neuropsychologie, RS: MHeNs - R2 - Mental Health, Promovendi MHN, MUMC+: MA Psychiatrie (3), and MUMC+: Hersen en Zenuw Centrum (3)
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Male ,SYMPTOMS ,Comorbidity ,Anxiety ,Cohort Studies ,Thinking ,0302 clinical medicine ,reasoning bias ,SCHIZOPHRENIA ,psychosis ,jumping to conclusions ,Applied Psychology ,Netherlands ,education.field_of_study ,Middle Aged ,PERSECUTORY DELUSIONS ,CIDI ,DEPRESSION ,Cognitive bias ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Memory, Short-Term ,Phenotype ,Schizophrenia ,COGNITIVE-DEVELOPMENT ,CONCLUSIONS ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,Mania ,Clinical psychology ,Adult ,Psychosis ,cognitive deficits ,Adolescent ,cognitive bias ,MAJOR PSYCHIATRIC-DISORDERS ,Population ,working memory ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,mania ,MENTAL-HEALTH SURVEY ,medicine ,Humans ,Affective Symptoms ,education ,Aged ,medicine.disease ,030227 psychiatry ,body regions ,transdiagnostic phenotype ,Psychotic Disorders ,ULTRA-HIGH RISK ,Jumping to conclusions ,human activities ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
BackgroundThe jumping to conclusions (JTC) reasoning bias and decreased working memory performance (WMP) are associated with psychosis, but associations with affective disturbances (i.e. depression, anxiety, mania) remain inconclusive. Recent findings also suggest a transdiagnostic phenotype of co-occurring affective disturbances and psychotic experiences (PEs). This study investigated whether JTC bias and decreased WMP are associated with co-occurring affective disturbances and PEs.MethodsData were derived from the second Netherlands Mental Health Survey and Incidence Study (NEMESIS-2). Trained interviewers administered the Composite International Diagnostic Interview (CIDI) at three time points in a general population sample (N = 4618). The beads and digit-span task were completed to assess JTC bias and WMP, respectively. CIDI was used to measure affective disturbances and an add-on instrument to measure PEs.ResultsCompared to individuals with neither affective disturbances nor PEs, the JTC bias was more likely to occur in individuals with co-occurring affective disturbances and PEs [moderate psychosis (1–2 PEs): adjusted relative risk ratio (RRR) 1.17, 95% CI 0.98–1.41; and high psychosis (3 or more PEs or psychosis-related help-seeking behaviour): adjusted RRR 1.57, 95% CI 1.19–2.08], but not with affective disturbances and PEs alone, whereas decreased WMP was more likely in all groups. There was some evidence of a dose–response relationship, as JTC bias and decreased WMP were more likely in individuals with affective disturbances as the level of PEs increased or help-seeking behaviour was reported.ConclusionThe findings suggest that JTC bias and decreased WMP may contribute to a transdiagnostic phenotype of co-occurring affective disturbances and PEs.
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- 2019
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8. Childhood adversities and risk for suicidal ideation and attempts: a longitudinal population-based study
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ENNS, MURRAY W., COX, BRIAN J., AFIFI, TRACIE O., DE GRAAF, RON, HAVE, MARGREET TEN, and SAREEN, JITENDER
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- 2006
9. Childhood adversities and risk for suicidal ideation and attempts: a longitudinal population-based study
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Ron de Graaf, Jitender Sareen, Brian J. Cox, Tracie O. Afifi, Margreet ten Have, and Murray W. Enns
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Child abuse ,Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Poison control ,Suicide, Attempted ,Suicide prevention ,Life Change Events ,Risk Factors ,medicine ,Humans ,Child Abuse ,Psychiatry ,Psychological abuse ,Child ,Suicidal ideation ,Applied Psychology ,Suicide attempt ,Incidence ,Mental Disorders ,Middle Aged ,Mental health ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Physical abuse ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,Clinical psychology ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Background. Developmental adversities may be risk factors for adult suicidal behavior, but this relationship has rarely been studied prospectively. The present study examined the association between childhood adversities and new onset suicidal ideation and attempts in an adult population-based sample.Method. The study used a large community mental health survey (the Netherlands Mental Health Survey and Incidence Study; n=7076, age range 18–64 years). Logistic regression analyses were used to evaluate the relationship between childhood adversities and new onset of suicidal ideation and attempts over 3 years of longitudinal follow-up.Results. During the study period 85 new cases of suicidal ideation and 39 new onset suicide attempts were observed. The incidence rate for new suicide ideation was 0·67% per year and the incidence rate for new suicide attempts was 0·28% per year. Childhood neglect, psychological abuse and physical abuse were strongly associated with new onset suicidal ideation and suicide attempts. Odds ratios (ORs) ranged from 2·80 to 4·66 for new onset suicidal ideation and from 3·60 to 5·43 for new onset suicide attempts. The total number of adversities reported had a strong graded relationship to new onset suicidal ideation and attempts. These associations remained significant after controlling for the effects of mental disorders.Conclusions. Childhood abuse and multiple adversities are strongly associated with future suicidal behavior and the mental disorders assessed in the present study do not fully account for this effect. A comprehensive understanding of suicidal behavior must take childhood adversities into account.
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- 2006
10. Childhood adversities and risk for suicidal ideation and attempts: a longitudinal population-based study.
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MURRAY W. ENNS, BRIAN J. COX, TRACIE O. AFIFI, RON DE GRAAF, MARGREET TEN HAVE, and JITENDER SAREEN
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SUICIDAL behavior ,DISEASE risk factors ,POPULATION ,MENTAL health ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Background. Developmental adversities may be risk factors for adult suicidal behavior, but this relationship has rarely been studied prospectively. The present study examined the association between childhood adversities and new onset suicidal ideation and attempts in an adult population-based sample.Method. The study used a large community mental health survey (the Netherlands Mental Health Survey and Incidence Study; n=7076, age range 18–64 years). Logistic regression analyses were used to evaluate the relationship between childhood adversities and new onset of suicidal ideation and attempts over 3 years of longitudinal follow-up.Results. During the study period 85 new cases of suicidal ideation and 39 new onset suicide attempts were observed. The incidence rate for new suicide ideation was 0·67% per year and the incidence rate for new suicide attempts was 0·28% per year. Childhood neglect, psychological abuse and physical abuse were strongly associated with new onset suicidal ideation and suicide attempts. Odds ratios (ORs) ranged from 2·80 to 4·66 for new onset suicidal ideation and from 3·60 to 5·43 for new onset suicide attempts. The total number of adversities reported had a strong graded relationship to new onset suicidal ideation and attempts. These associations remained significant after controlling for the effects of mental disorders.Conclusions. Childhood abuse and multiple adversities are strongly associated with future suicidal behavior and the mental disorders assessed in the present study do not fully account for this effect. A comprehensive understanding of suicidal behavior must take childhood adversities into account. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2006
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