Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
Life

Talk therapy lowers suicide risk

Darpan News Desk IANS, 24 Nov, 2014 10:58 AM
    Talk therapy is gaining in importance as an alternative to medication with regard to averting repeated suicide attempts, a study shows.
     
    Just six-to-10 talk therapy sessions led to 26 percent fewer suicides in five years in the group that received treatment as compared to a group that did not, the researchers found.
     
    "Now we have evidence that psycho-social treatment - which provides support, not medication - is able to prevent suicide in a group at high risk of dying by suicide," said Annette Erlangsen, the study's leader and adjunct associate professor at the Johns Hopkins University in the US.
     
    The researchers say their findings suggest that it might be valuable to broadly implement therapy programmes for people who have attempted suicide in the past.
     
    For the study, the researchers analysed health data from more than 65,000 people in Denmark who attempted suicide between Jan 1, 1992, and Dec 31, 2010.
     
    Of that group, they looked at 5,678 people who received psycho-social therapy at one of eight suicide prevention clinics.
     
    The researchers then compared their outcomes over time with 17,304 people who had attempted suicide and looked similar on 31 factors but had not gone for treatment afterward.
     
    After five years, there were 26 percent fewer suicides in the group that had been treated with psycho-social therapy following their attempt.
     
    The therapy itself varied depending on the individual needs of the patient so the researchers cannot say exactly what the "active ingredient" was that inoculated many against future suicide attempts.
     
    A study was published online in the journal Lancet Psychiatry.

    MORE Life ARTICLES

    A happy wife means a happy life

    A happy wife means a happy life
    When it comes to a happy marriage, says an interesting study, the more content the wife is with the long-term union, the happier the husband...

    A happy wife means a happy life

    Why teenagers are more impulsive

    Why teenagers are more impulsive
    Does your teenage kid keep tweeting even during his/her studies? This may well be because teenagers are far more sensitive than adults to the immediate...

    Why teenagers are more impulsive

    Gambling is not all that bad, says study

    Gambling is not all that bad, says study
    Gambling is not always bad, especially for those who indulge in it for fun and are in control of their gambling habit, says a new study....

    Gambling is not all that bad, says study

    'Dirty' networking games made for people in power

    'Dirty' networking games made for people in power
    If you want to reinforce your say in the "dirty" game of professional networking to either grab a better job or crack a business deal, get it done from the top....

    'Dirty' networking games made for people in power

    Resilience the key to tolerating pain

    Resilience the key to tolerating pain
    People who are able to accept their pain feel less pain, are more active on a daily basis and have a better mood -- and these findings hold true for men and...

    Resilience the key to tolerating pain

    Poverty makes minority kids more vulnerable to abuse

    Poverty makes minority kids more vulnerable to abuse
    Children belonging to minority communities face increased risk of maltreatment due to exposure to poverty, says a US-based study....

    Poverty makes minority kids more vulnerable to abuse