TY - JOUR
T1 - Implicit Identification with Death, Clinician Evaluation and Suicide Ideation among Adolescent Psychiatric Outpatients-The Mediating Role of Depression
AU - Toukhy, Nermin
AU - Gvion, Yari
AU - Barzilay, Shira
AU - Apter, Alan
AU - Haruvi-Catalan, Liat
AU - Bursztein-Lipsicas, Cendrine
AU - Shilian, Maya
AU - Mijiritsky, Ori
AU - Benaroya-Milshtein, Noa
AU - Fennig, Silvana
AU - Hamdan, Sami
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 International Academy for Suicide Research.
PY - 2023/11/17
Y1 - 2023/11/17
N2 - Implicit identification with death (i.e., subconsciously self-associating oneself with death), measured by the Death-Suicide Implicit Association Test (D/S-IAT), is associated with Suicide Ideation (SI). Our understanding of the mechanisms underlying this association is limited. The current study examined (1) the mediating role of depression between D/S-IAT and recent SI and (2) the association between SI, D/S-IAT, and clinician evaluation of SI among a clinical sample of adolescents. 148 adolescents aged 10–18 years (69.4% female) from two outpatient clinics were assessed at intake. Participants completed D/S-IAT and self-report measures for recent SI and depression during intake. Findings indicate that depression is a mediator between D/S-IAT and recent SI, controlling for gender, site differences, and past suicidal thoughts and behaviors. D/S-IAT and clinician evaluation were correlated with recent SI but not beyond depression. Our findings highlight the importance of examining the underlying psychological mechanisms regarding the association between D/S-IAT and suicide.
AB - Implicit identification with death (i.e., subconsciously self-associating oneself with death), measured by the Death-Suicide Implicit Association Test (D/S-IAT), is associated with Suicide Ideation (SI). Our understanding of the mechanisms underlying this association is limited. The current study examined (1) the mediating role of depression between D/S-IAT and recent SI and (2) the association between SI, D/S-IAT, and clinician evaluation of SI among a clinical sample of adolescents. 148 adolescents aged 10–18 years (69.4% female) from two outpatient clinics were assessed at intake. Participants completed D/S-IAT and self-report measures for recent SI and depression during intake. Findings indicate that depression is a mediator between D/S-IAT and recent SI, controlling for gender, site differences, and past suicidal thoughts and behaviors. D/S-IAT and clinician evaluation were correlated with recent SI but not beyond depression. Our findings highlight the importance of examining the underlying psychological mechanisms regarding the association between D/S-IAT and suicide.
KW - Adolescents
KW - clinician evaluation
KW - death/suicide implicit association test
KW - depression
KW - suicide ideation
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85177068001&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/13811118.2023.2282661
DO - 10.1080/13811118.2023.2282661
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C2 - 37975170
AN - SCOPUS:85177068001
SN - 1381-1118
JO - Archives of Suicide Research
JF - Archives of Suicide Research
ER -