Reduction of suicidal ideation in patients undergoing psychotherapy in the day hospital for the treatment of neurotic and behavioral disorders and neurotic symptoms reported by them before the hospitalization
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Katedra Psychoterapii UJ CM
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Klinika Psychiatrii Dzieci i Młodzieży CM UJ
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Katedra Historii Medycyny UJ CM
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Zakład Psychoterapii Szpitala Uniwersyteckiego w Krakowie
Submission date: 2014-07-18
Final revision date: 2014-09-17
Acceptance date: 2014-10-06
Publication date: 2015-08-31
Corresponding author
Paweł Rodziński
Katedra Psychoterapii Collegium Medicum UJ, ul. Lenartowicza 14, 31-138 Kraków, Polska
Psychiatr Pol 2015;49(4):847-864
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ABSTRACT
Objectives:
Analysis of associations between symptoms reported before the beginning of the hospitalization and reduction of suicidal ideation – or its lack – obtained until the end of the
hospitalization in patients of the day hospital for the treatment of neurotic and behavioral disorders.
Methods:
Symptoms Checklist KO“O” and Life Inventory completed by 461 women and 219 men treated with intensive integrative psychotherapy with predominance of psychodynamic approach in the day hospital due to neurotic, behavioral and personality disorders between 2005-2013. Percentages of patients reporting SI initially and at the end of the treatment were 29.1% and 10.2% respectively in women and 36.5% and 13.7% in men. The improvement in terms of initially reported SI was obtained by 84.3% of women and 77.5% of men. Among patients, those initially reporting SI were characterized by greater intensity of neurotic symptoms (p<0.001) and greater intensity of nearly all of 14 subtypes
of neurotic symptoms(p<0.05).
Results:
Among those reporting SI, subgroups of women with greater intensity of Obsessive-compulsive symptoms (p=0.003), Neurasthenia (p=0.005), Autonomic disorders (p=0.044) and women reporting episodes of uncontrollable hunger (p<0.01) had significantly lower chances of improvement in terms of SI than others.
Conclusions:
Patients initially reporting SI constituted approximately 1/3 in both genders and were characterized by greater intensity of neurotic disorders. Among those, women with particularly higher intensity of Obsessive-compulsive symptoms, Neurasthenia and Autonomic
disorders and women reporting episodes of uncontrollable hunger seemed to suffer from SI
that were more resistant to the psychotherapy. As such, those subgroups of women require
special attention and diligent selection of the therapeutic methods.