Risk Factors Associated with Suicidal Ideation in Students of the Faculty of Medicine and Surgery, URSE
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Design
2.2. Participants
2.3. Instruments and Procedure
- (a)
- Beck’s Suicidal Ideation Scale, a semi-structured scale consisting of 19 items to determine, assess, and evaluate the presence and severity of suicidal ideation and suicide attempts in each group of people, has a reliability with a Cronbach’s alpha between 0.83 and 0.89. This scale quantifies suicidal intentionality by assessing thoughts or ideas of self-harm. The scale is composed of 19 items; for each item, there are three response alternatives rated according to their intensity, from 0 to 2, indicating an increasing degree of severity and intensity of suicidal intentionality, the total sum indicating the severity of suicidal ideation, and the different items are distributed in 4 sections: Attitude towards life and death (items 1 to 5); characteristics of the imagination or death wish (items 6 to 11); characteristics of the planned attempt (items 12 to 15); actualization of the effort (items 16 to 19). Cutoff point: The proposed cutoff point is a score greater than or equal to 10, which would indicate suicidal ideation [27].
- (b)
- Beck Depression Inventory, which allows the treatment of depressive symptomatology, as it is an instrument proven to be reliable and valid for use in clinical and research settings. It consists of 21 elements, with the possibility of responses that range from less to more severity and score from 0 to 3, explicitly taking into account the opinion about symptoms presented since the previous week; it is mobilized in a range of 0–63 points, to classify the degree of depression, the scale is interpreted as follows: no depression (0–9 points), mild depression (10–18 points), moderate depression (19–29 points), severe depression (30 or more), regarding its psychometric characteristics [28].
- (c)
- The Abbreviated Scale of School Bullying Questionnaire is a validated survey that measures school bullying, allowing the identification of initial victimization by physical, verbal, social, and coercive bullying; the second part also consists of 12 questions about bullying by the respondents; and the third part also of 12 items, consists of questions to measure symptoms of anxiety, depression, post-traumatic stress, and also effects on self-esteem [29].
- (d)
- Drug Dependency Identification Questionnaire, developed ad hoc: this is an instrument made up of 10 questions designed to investigate the relationship between behaviors in adolescents involving the use, abuse, or dependence on addictive substances in general terms; it has a combined response format, where some items may have as answer alternatives yes or no to inquire: consumption of alcohol, tobacco, cocaine, marijuana, inhalants, and solvents, while others are aimed at obtaining the frequency of consumption such as daily, weekly, or monthly, finally some items seek to determine the reasons for consumption such as for fun, to experiment, to avoid feeling rejected, and for not being able to abandon it [30].
- (e)
- Family Apgar is an instrument that shows how family members perceive the level of functioning of the family unit globally; it is helpful to establish how an individual describes how his family environment functions at a given moment, achieving an approximation to the identification of families that present problems or dysfunctions; for this purpose, this test evaluates five primary functions of the family: Adaptation, Participation, Gradient of personal resources, Affection, and Resources. It has a correlation index of 0.8, and the answers have a score of 0 to 4: 0 = Never, 1 = Rarely, 2 = Sometimes, 3 = Almost Always, and 4 = Always. Interpretation is made according to the score obtained: regular: 17–20 points, slight dysfunction: 16–13 points, moderate dysfunction: 12–10 points, and severe dysfunction: less than or equal to 9 [31].
- (f)
- A survey establishing socioeconomic and demographic factors includes questions about background, ethnicity, household income, and family typology.
2.4. Ethical Aspects
3. Results
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Level of Depression | Percentage (%) | Family Functionalism | Percentage (%) |
---|---|---|---|
Normal | 92.1 | Regular | 57.1 |
Slight depression | 6.4 | Slight dysfunction | 17.7 |
Moderate depression | 1.4 | Moderate dysfunction | 9.9 |
Severe depression | 0 | Severe dysfunction | 15.3 |
Total | 100 | Total | 100 |
Bullying | Percentage (%) | Intimidation | Percentage (%) |
---|---|---|---|
Present | 19.7 | Present | 5.9 |
Absent | 80.3 | Absent | 94.1 |
Total | 100 | Total | 100 |
Symptomatology | Percentage (%) | Addictions | Percentage (%) |
---|---|---|---|
Present | 31.5 | Yes | 22.2 |
Absent | 68.5 | No | 77.8 |
Total | 100 | Total | 100 |
Suicidal Ideation | Frequency | Percentage (%) |
---|---|---|
Yes | 11 | 5.4 |
No | 192 | 94.6 |
Total | 203 | 100 |
Scale | Correlation Coefficient | Significance |
---|---|---|
Depression scale | 0.498 | 0.000 |
Bullying scale | 0.505 | 0.000 |
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García-Montalvo, I.A.; Matías-Pérez, D.; López-Castellanos, S.L.; López-Ramírez, E.; Martínez-López, M. Risk Factors Associated with Suicidal Ideation in Students of the Faculty of Medicine and Surgery, URSE. Psychiatry Int. 2024, 5, 544-551. https://doi.org/10.3390/psychiatryint5030039
García-Montalvo IA, Matías-Pérez D, López-Castellanos SL, López-Ramírez E, Martínez-López M. Risk Factors Associated with Suicidal Ideation in Students of the Faculty of Medicine and Surgery, URSE. Psychiatry International. 2024; 5(3):544-551. https://doi.org/10.3390/psychiatryint5030039
Chicago/Turabian StyleGarcía-Montalvo, Iván Antonio, Diana Matías-Pérez, Silvia Lois López-Castellanos, Enrique López-Ramírez, and Moisés Martínez-López. 2024. "Risk Factors Associated with Suicidal Ideation in Students of the Faculty of Medicine and Surgery, URSE" Psychiatry International 5, no. 3: 544-551. https://doi.org/10.3390/psychiatryint5030039