Suicidal Behavior and Adolescent Substance Use/Abuse Oscar Bukstein, MD, MPH Medical Director.

57
Suicidal Behavior and Adolescent Substance Use/Abuse Oscar Bukstein, MD, MPH Medical Director

Transcript of Suicidal Behavior and Adolescent Substance Use/Abuse Oscar Bukstein, MD, MPH Medical Director.

Page 1: Suicidal Behavior and Adolescent Substance Use/Abuse Oscar Bukstein, MD, MPH Medical Director.

Suicidal Behavior and Adolescent Substance Use/Abuse

Oscar Bukstein, MD, MPHMedical Director

Page 2: Suicidal Behavior and Adolescent Substance Use/Abuse Oscar Bukstein, MD, MPH Medical Director.

Disclosure

• Royalties from Routledge Press

Page 3: Suicidal Behavior and Adolescent Substance Use/Abuse Oscar Bukstein, MD, MPH Medical Director.

Objectives/Agenda

• What About Suicide and Substance use disorders (SUDs)?–Nature of relationship

• Screening, assessment• Safety planning• Treatment

Page 4: Suicidal Behavior and Adolescent Substance Use/Abuse Oscar Bukstein, MD, MPH Medical Director.

And where did you learn all this, Dr. Bukstein?

• Service for Teens at Risk (STAR Center)University of Pittsburgh Medical CenterWestern Psychiatric institute and Clinic

Dr. David BrentDr. Mary Margaret Kerr

Page 5: Suicidal Behavior and Adolescent Substance Use/Abuse Oscar Bukstein, MD, MPH Medical Director.

Why is it important to assess suicidal risk and behavior?

• Suicide is the 3rd leading cause of death in adolescents

• Suicide attempts are one of the most common causes for psychiatric hospital admission in this age group.

• Suicidal thoughts and actions often pre-sage subsequent suicide attempts and completions

• Adolescents with SUDs have many suicide risk factors and have a higher suicide risk

Page 6: Suicidal Behavior and Adolescent Substance Use/Abuse Oscar Bukstein, MD, MPH Medical Director.

Since 1960…..

• Rapid increase in adolescent drug use• 300% increase in suicidal behavior

–Increase between 1960-1990• Attributable to drug and alcohol

problems

Page 7: Suicidal Behavior and Adolescent Substance Use/Abuse Oscar Bukstein, MD, MPH Medical Director.

Morbidity & Mortality in AdolescenceMorbidity & Mortality in Adolescence

Primary sources of death/disability are related to problems with control of behavior and emotion

• Accidents, suicide, homicide, depression, alcohol & substance use, violence, reckless behaviors, eating disorders, risky sexual behaviors…

• Risk-taking, sensation-seeking, and erratic (emotionally-influenced) behavior

• Onset of problems with later health consequences

Page 8: Suicidal Behavior and Adolescent Substance Use/Abuse Oscar Bukstein, MD, MPH Medical Director.

Fundamental Imbalance in Puberty

• Rapid physical, endocrine, and social changes that create early affective motivations and challenges

• Gradual, later development of affect regulation and maturation of cognitive/self-control skills

Emotional CapacityPubertal drives and emotions; sensation seeking; risk taking; sensitivity to rewards, low self control

Cognitive CapacityPlanning; logic; reasoning, inhibitory control; problem-solving skills; capacity for understanding long-term consequences of behavior

Page 9: Suicidal Behavior and Adolescent Substance Use/Abuse Oscar Bukstein, MD, MPH Medical Director.

The Adolescent BrainThe Adolescent Brain

Particularly vulnerable to external inputs:• Environmental exposures• Psychosocial stressors• Drug and alcohol use• Protective factors

Prefrontal cortex not fully developed until early adulthood• Unique stage of change in metabolism, pruning, and

increased efficiency in prefrontal functionEmotional centers (limbic) without checks and balances

• Greater sensitivity to rewards, less inhibition• Seek altered states of consciousness

Effects are longstanding

Page 10: Suicidal Behavior and Adolescent Substance Use/Abuse Oscar Bukstein, MD, MPH Medical Director.

Regulatory neural circuitry b/t prefrontal cortex and limbic system vulnerable to:• genetic defects• developmental delays• injury• metabolic errors• stress and adversity• drug and alcohol use

Breakdown in Brain’s Regulatory System May Breakdown in Brain’s Regulatory System May Heighten RiskHeighten Risk

Page 11: Suicidal Behavior and Adolescent Substance Use/Abuse Oscar Bukstein, MD, MPH Medical Director.

Focal Point: Prefrontal Deficits

• Inability to accurately interpret social cues • Permits negative emotions to dominate• Heightened sensitivity to rewards (immediate)• Impulsivity and Inattention• Insensitivity to Consequence

* Doesn’t fully connect until after adolescence!!!

Page 12: Suicidal Behavior and Adolescent Substance Use/Abuse Oscar Bukstein, MD, MPH Medical Director.

Substance Use and Decision-Making

• Presumably substance use involves poor decision making• Decision-making is determined by the interaction of higher

level brain processes – Executive Functions– Controlled largely by Pre Frontal Cortex (PFC)

• With lower level centers– Limbic system - amygdala, hippocampus– Nucleus Acumbens

Page 13: Suicidal Behavior and Adolescent Substance Use/Abuse Oscar Bukstein, MD, MPH Medical Director.

What about Pre-existing “Brain” Problems

• PFC/Executive Functioning deficits: ADHD – Increased prevalence in adolescents with SUDs/AUDs (up

to 50%)– ADHD as SUD risk factor?

• Conduct problems (up to 80%)– Definitely as risk factor

• Internalizing problems (more than half)– Depression, , irritability, and anxiety

• Genetic Origin?

Page 14: Suicidal Behavior and Adolescent Substance Use/Abuse Oscar Bukstein, MD, MPH Medical Director.

Confluence of Risk Factors

Suicide in 23 adolescent suicides compared to 12 community controls with a lifetime history of substance abuse•Suicides were more likely to be active substance abusers•Have comorbid major depression,•Suicidal ideation within the past week•A family history of depression and substance abuse•Legal problems •Presence of lethal weapons in the home

•Bukstein et al., 2003

Page 15: Suicidal Behavior and Adolescent Substance Use/Abuse Oscar Bukstein, MD, MPH Medical Director.

Suicide and SUDs in Adolescents

• Adolescent substance users have more than a 2.5-fold increase in risk for suicidal behaviors compared to non-drug using adolescents (SAMHSA, 2002).

• Combination of poor impulse control, stressful life events, suicidal behavior, and substance use may interact to amplify the likelihood of negative consequences that occur with these behaviors (Bridge et al. 2006; Dalton et al. 2005; Putnins, 1995).

Page 16: Suicidal Behavior and Adolescent Substance Use/Abuse Oscar Bukstein, MD, MPH Medical Director.

Impulse Control, SUDs, and Suicide

• Impulse control as a risk factor for SUDs• Impulse control as a risk factor for

suicide

Page 17: Suicidal Behavior and Adolescent Substance Use/Abuse Oscar Bukstein, MD, MPH Medical Director.

Stressful Life Events

• Risk factor for suicide– Parental separation, social isolation; poor family

communication, family dysfunction; relationship break-ups, conflicts with peers or parents; victimization by peers; low social support, as well as relationship strain due to parental SUD and other parental psychopathology

• Risk factor for SUDs– See above

Page 18: Suicidal Behavior and Adolescent Substance Use/Abuse Oscar Bukstein, MD, MPH Medical Director.

Acute Pharmacologic Effects of drug/aclohol Intoxication

• Impair judgment• Lower inhibitions• Worsen impulse control• Affect specific neurotransmitter systems• Chronic neurocogntive effects

• Mann et al., 2003

Page 19: Suicidal Behavior and Adolescent Substance Use/Abuse Oscar Bukstein, MD, MPH Medical Director.

SUD-Related Consequences

• Developmental problems/failures–Academic –Vocational –Relationships

• Legal problems

Page 20: Suicidal Behavior and Adolescent Substance Use/Abuse Oscar Bukstein, MD, MPH Medical Director.

Stress-Diathesis Model of Suicide

• Confluence of stressors and other risk factors interacting with underlying predispositions or vulnerabilities (i.e. diatheses).

Page 21: Suicidal Behavior and Adolescent Substance Use/Abuse Oscar Bukstein, MD, MPH Medical Director.

General Principles of Suicide Risk Assessment

• Assessment is the beginning of treatment• Explain what you are going to do and why• Get the teen’s buy-in– ask permission!• Ask open-ended questions that cannot be

answered “yes” or “no.”• Monitor the quality of information based on

consistency with other information obtained and with non-verbal behavior

Page 22: Suicidal Behavior and Adolescent Substance Use/Abuse Oscar Bukstein, MD, MPH Medical Director.

Assessment of Suicidal Behavior

• ID Risk factors• Asking about Suicidal behavior

Page 23: Suicidal Behavior and Adolescent Substance Use/Abuse Oscar Bukstein, MD, MPH Medical Director.

Five Key Domains of Risk Assessment*“Risk Factors”

• Present/past suicidal ideation/behaviorPresent/past suicidal ideation/behavior• Psychiatric disordersPsychiatric disorders• Psychological traitsPsychological traits• Family and environmental stressors and Family and environmental stressors and

supportssupports• Availability of lethal agentsAvailability of lethal agents

*Brent et al. , 1997, 2001

Page 24: Suicidal Behavior and Adolescent Substance Use/Abuse Oscar Bukstein, MD, MPH Medical Director.

Suicide: Distal Risk Factors

• Suicide history, personal or family• Abuse• Difficult course

• Difficult patient• Aggression• Depression• Substance Abuse

Page 25: Suicidal Behavior and Adolescent Substance Use/Abuse Oscar Bukstein, MD, MPH Medical Director.

Proximal Risk Factors for Suicide

• Agitation, anxiety, akathisia• Insomnia• Despondent mood – “psychache”

• Ideation with intent• Lability – mixed state, psychosis• Lethal agents

Page 26: Suicidal Behavior and Adolescent Substance Use/Abuse Oscar Bukstein, MD, MPH Medical Director.

Recognize Health Risk Behaviors Associated with Suicidal Behavior*

• Unprotected sex and STDs• Alcohol, drug, tobacco use• Weapon-carrying• Binge eating and obesity• Bullying/being bullied• Each of these can in turn increase risk of

suicidality, accident, injury, and death• LGBT

*King et al., 2001; Marshall et al., 2008

Page 27: Suicidal Behavior and Adolescent Substance Use/Abuse Oscar Bukstein, MD, MPH Medical Director.

1.Characteristics of Suicidality*

• Intent/current ideation• Reasons for Living• Lethality• Precipitant• Motivation

*Hawton et al., 1982; Brent et al., 1997, 2001

Page 28: Suicidal Behavior and Adolescent Substance Use/Abuse Oscar Bukstein, MD, MPH Medical Director.

Suicidal Behavior during Substance Use

• SB during intoxication• SB during recovery (detox /or

withdrawal)• SB related to SUD consequences

–Stressful life events–Psychosocial failure–Chronic neurocognitive changes

Page 29: Suicidal Behavior and Adolescent Substance Use/Abuse Oscar Bukstein, MD, MPH Medical Director.

2. Psychopathology

• mood disorder, esp bipolar disorder, particularly mixed state

• Substance abuse• Conduct disorder• Eating disorders• PTSD, panic, complicated grief• Comorbidity, chronicity, severity• Developmental interactions (intent,

alcohol)

Page 30: Suicidal Behavior and Adolescent Substance Use/Abuse Oscar Bukstein, MD, MPH Medical Director.

3. Psychological Characteristics

• Hopelessness (dropout, poor treatment response, attempt)

• Impulsivity and aggression (strong predictor of early-onset suicidal behavior, especially in presence of a mood disorder, familial component)

• Distress tolerance/emotion regulation• Social skills deficits (assertiveness, social problem-

solving)• Lack of Access to Positive Memories / Affect (Over-

general Autobiographic Memory)

Page 31: Suicidal Behavior and Adolescent Substance Use/Abuse Oscar Bukstein, MD, MPH Medical Director.

4. Family and Social Risk Factors• Parental history of psychiatric illness suicidal behavior• Abuse and neglect, in child and in parent• Parent/child discord• Disruption of interpersonal relationships• Grief (esp. complicated grief)• Disconnection and “drifting” (Gould, 1996)• Bullying/being a bullier (girls)• Same sex attraction, transgendered (bullying, family

rejection)

Page 32: Suicidal Behavior and Adolescent Substance Use/Abuse Oscar Bukstein, MD, MPH Medical Director.

Family and Social Protective Factors

• Parent-child connection• High parental expectations• Parental supervision and availability• School connection• Religious affiliation• Non-deviant peer group

Page 33: Suicidal Behavior and Adolescent Substance Use/Abuse Oscar Bukstein, MD, MPH Medical Director.

5. Availability of Lethal Agents

• Guns• Medications• Drugs and Alcohol

Page 34: Suicidal Behavior and Adolescent Substance Use/Abuse Oscar Bukstein, MD, MPH Medical Director.

Asking….

Hierarchical questioning• Start with hopelessness, through death wish to ideation,

intent, plan, and past attempts• History of past attempts: when, means, intent, did anyone

know– Are you disappointed that you did not succeed?

COLUMBIA-SUICIDE SEVERITY RATING SCALE (C-SSRS) Posner, Brent et al, 2009On- going Inquiry – high risk every time

Page 35: Suicidal Behavior and Adolescent Substance Use/Abuse Oscar Bukstein, MD, MPH Medical Director.

Definitions of suicidality*

• Thoughts of death• Passive death wish• Thoughts of suicide, no plan or intent• Thoughts of suicide, plan and/or intent• “Aborted” suicide—person stopped self• “Interrupted” suicide– stopped by other

*Posner et al., 2007

Page 36: Suicidal Behavior and Adolescent Substance Use/Abuse Oscar Bukstein, MD, MPH Medical Director.

Definitions (continued)

• Suicide attemptSuicide attempt: Intentional self-injurious behavior with at least inferred intent to die

• Suicide completionSuicide completion: Suicide attempt that results in fatality

• Don’t use the term “gesture.” (threat with a prop)

Page 37: Suicidal Behavior and Adolescent Substance Use/Abuse Oscar Bukstein, MD, MPH Medical Director.

Developing a Treatment plan

• Chain analysis• Assess required level of care – based on

functioning and estimated ability to adhere to a safety plan

• Safety Plan – including securing lethal agents

• Treatment plan that decrease risk and increase protective factors

Page 38: Suicidal Behavior and Adolescent Substance Use/Abuse Oscar Bukstein, MD, MPH Medical Director.

Chain Analysis

• Reconstruct events, thoughts, feelings leading up to the suicide attempt

• “Freeze frame” (Wexler, 1991)• Identifies precipitants, motivation, intent,

current reaction, reaction of environment• Identifies stressors and vulnerabilities, in

order to develop a treatment plan

Page 39: Suicidal Behavior and Adolescent Substance Use/Abuse Oscar Bukstein, MD, MPH Medical Director.

From Chain Analysis to Safety Plan

• Avoid Precipitants: Don’t call girlfriend, don’t drink

• Self-coping: listening to music, exercise, meditation, avoid stressful discussion

• Reaching out: calling friend, talking with parents

• Clinical contact: therapist, on-call clinician, crisis line, ER

Page 40: Suicidal Behavior and Adolescent Substance Use/Abuse Oscar Bukstein, MD, MPH Medical Director.

No-Suicide Contract

• No-suicide contracts ask youth to promise to stay alive without telling them how to stay alive

• •No-suicide contracts may provide a false sense of assurance to the clinician

• No-suicide contracts have not been shown to prevent recurrent suicidal behavior

• Instead, need a more dynamic contingency plan for coping with suicidal thoughts and anticipated stressors

Page 41: Suicidal Behavior and Adolescent Substance Use/Abuse Oscar Bukstein, MD, MPH Medical Director.

What is a Safety Plan?

• Prioritized written list of coping strategies and resources for use during a suicidal crisis

• •Provides a sense of control/framework • •Brief process • •Accomplished via an easy-to-read format

using the patient’s own words • •Involves a commitment to the treatment

process (and staying alive)

Page 42: Suicidal Behavior and Adolescent Substance Use/Abuse Oscar Bukstein, MD, MPH Medical Director.

Treatment Considerations

• Treat Depression, other mood and comorbid disorders– MDD, Bipolar disorder, ADHD

• Reduce Stress– Family, social (peer), school issues

• Increase ability to handle stress• Decrease “high risk” situations (including substance

use)• Safety plan and automatic responses• Decrease/stop substance use

Page 43: Suicidal Behavior and Adolescent Substance Use/Abuse Oscar Bukstein, MD, MPH Medical Director.

Treatments for Adolescent with Suicidal Behavior

• Cognitive Behavior Therapy for Suicide Prevention (CBT-SP)– theoretically grounded in principles of cognitive behavior therapy,

dialectical behavioral therapy and targeted therapies for suicidal, depressed youth

– acute and continuation phases– includes a chain analysis of the suicidal event, safety plan development,

skill building, psychoeducation, family intervention, and relapse prevention.

– Drug and alcohol module to focus on role of D&A in mood and suicidal behavior

– Brent et al., 2009

Page 44: Suicidal Behavior and Adolescent Substance Use/Abuse Oscar Bukstein, MD, MPH Medical Director.

Who Develops the Plan?

• Collaboratively developed by the clinician and the youth in any clinical setting

• •Youth who have -made a suicide attempt -have suicidal ideation -have psychiatric disorders that increase suicide risk -otherwise been determined to be at high risk

for suicide

Page 45: Suicidal Behavior and Adolescent Substance Use/Abuse Oscar Bukstein, MD, MPH Medical Director.

When is it Appropriate?

Usually follows a suicide risk assessment • A safety plan may be done at any point during the

assessment or the treatment process • Safety plan may not be appropriate when youth are

at imminent suicide risk or have profound cognitive impairment

•The clinician should adapt the approach to the youth’s needs—such as involving family members in using the safety plan

Page 46: Suicidal Behavior and Adolescent Substance Use/Abuse Oscar Bukstein, MD, MPH Medical Director.

Step 1: Recognizing Warning Signs

• Safety plan is only useful if youth can recognize the warning signs

• •The clinician should obtain an accurate account of the events that transpired before, during, and after the most recent suicidal crisis

• •Ask ―How will you know when the safety plan should be used?‖

• •Ask ―What do you experience when you start to think about suicide or feel extremely distressed?‖

• •Write down the warning signs (thoughts, images, thinking processes, mood, and/or behaviors) using the youths’ own words

Page 47: Suicidal Behavior and Adolescent Substance Use/Abuse Oscar Bukstein, MD, MPH Medical Director.

Step 2: Using Internal Coping Strategies

• List activities that youth can do without contacting another person

• Activities function as a way to help youth take their minds off their problems and promote meaning in the youth’s life

• Coping strategies prevent suicidal ideation from escalating • It is useful to try to have youth cope on their own with their

suicidal feelings, even if it is just for a brief time • Ask ―What can you do, on your own, if you become suicidal

again, to help yourself not to act on your thoughts or urges?‖

Page 48: Suicidal Behavior and Adolescent Substance Use/Abuse Oscar Bukstein, MD, MPH Medical Director.

Step 3: Socializing with Family Members or Others

• Coach youth to use Step 3 if Step 2 does not resolve the crisis or lower the risk

• •Family, friends, and acquaintances who may offer support and distraction from the crisis

Page 49: Suicidal Behavior and Adolescent Substance Use/Abuse Oscar Bukstein, MD, MPH Medical Director.

Step 4: Contacting Family Members or Friends for Help

• Coach youth to use Step 4 if Step 3 does not resolve the crisis or lower risk

• •Ask ―How likely would you be willing to contact these individuals?‖

• •Identify potential obstacles and problem solve ways to overcome them

Page 50: Suicidal Behavior and Adolescent Substance Use/Abuse Oscar Bukstein, MD, MPH Medical Director.

Step 6: Reducing the Potential for Use of Lethal Means

• Ask youth what means they would consider using during a suicidal crisis

• •Regardless, the clinician should always ask whether the patient has access to a firearm

• For methods of low lethality, clinicians may ask youth to remove or restrict their access to these methods themselves

• -For example, if youth are considering overdosing, discuss throwing out any unnecessary medication

• For methods of high lethality, collaboratively identify ways for a responsible person to secure or limit access

Page 51: Suicidal Behavior and Adolescent Substance Use/Abuse Oscar Bukstein, MD, MPH Medical Director.

How to negotiate about guns

• Are there guns at home? What kind? and how are they stored?• Who owns them? • Ask these questions of the gun-owner):

– Why do you have them?– Would you be willing to consider removing

them from the home for now?– If not, would you be willing to secure them?

– Store ammunition elsewhere

Page 52: Suicidal Behavior and Adolescent Substance Use/Abuse Oscar Bukstein, MD, MPH Medical Director.

Implementation: What is the Likelihood of Use?

• Ask: ―Where will you keep your safety plan?‖ • Ask: ―How likely is it that you will use the Safety Plan when

you notice the warning signs that we discussed?‖ • Ask: ―What might get in the way or serve as a barrier to your

using the safety plan?‖ • -Help the youth find ways to • overcome these barriers • -May be adapted to brief crisis cards, • cell phones or other portable • electronic devices, must be readily • accessible and easy-to-use.

Page 53: Suicidal Behavior and Adolescent Substance Use/Abuse Oscar Bukstein, MD, MPH Medical Director.

Implementation: Review the Safety Plan Periodically

• Periodically review, discuss, and possibly revise the safety plan after each time it is used

-The plan is not a static document -It should be revised as youth’s

circumstances and needs change over time

Page 54: Suicidal Behavior and Adolescent Substance Use/Abuse Oscar Bukstein, MD, MPH Medical Director.

Follow up

Always follow up on plan–Interim phone calls to family–Other involved professionals–Timely appointments

Page 55: Suicidal Behavior and Adolescent Substance Use/Abuse Oscar Bukstein, MD, MPH Medical Director.

Document

Always Document!

What happened…What you said…Response of child/adolescent and familyPlan

Page 56: Suicidal Behavior and Adolescent Substance Use/Abuse Oscar Bukstein, MD, MPH Medical Director.

Document

Always Document!If it isn’t written down, it did not happen

What happened…What you said…Response of child/adolescent and familyPlan

Page 57: Suicidal Behavior and Adolescent Substance Use/Abuse Oscar Bukstein, MD, MPH Medical Director.

Discussion