C-SSRS performance in emergency department patients at high risk for suicide

Lily A Brown, Edwin D Boudreaux, Sarah A Arias, Ivan W Miller, Alexis M May, Carlos A Camargo Jr, Craig J Bryan, Michael F Armey, Lily A Brown, Edwin D Boudreaux, Sarah A Arias, Ivan W Miller, Alexis M May, Carlos A Camargo Jr, Craig J Bryan, Michael F Armey

Abstract

Objective: To evaluate the psychometric and predictive performance of the Columbia-Suicide Severity Rating Scale (C-SSRS) in emergency department (ED) patients with suicidal ideation or attempts (SI/SA).

Methods: Participants (n = 1,376, mean age 36.8, 55% female, 76.8% white) completed the C-SSRS during the ED visit and were followed for one year. Reliability analyses, exploratory structural equation modeling, and prediction of future SA were explored.

Results: Reliability of the Suicidal Ideation subscale was adequate, but was poor for the Intensity of Ideation and Suicidal Behavior subscales. Three empirically derived factors characterized the C-SSRS. Only Factor 1 (Suicidal Ideation and Attempts) was a reliable predictor of subsequent SA, though odds ratios were small (ORs: 1.09-1.10, CI95% : 1.04, 1.15). The original C-SSRS Suicidal Ideation and Suicidal Behavior subscales and the C-SSRS ED screen predicted subsequent SA, again with small odds ratios (ORs: 1.07-1.19, CI95% : 1.01, 1.29). In participants without a SA history, no C-SSRS subscale predicted subsequent SA. History of any SA (OR: 1.98, CI95% : 1.43, 2.75) was the strongest predictor of subsequent SA.

Conclusions: The psychometric evidence for the C-SSRS was mixed. History of a prior SA, as measured by the C-SSRS, provided the most parsimonious and powerful assessment for predicting future SA.

Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01150994.

© 2020 The American Association of Suicidology.

Figures

Figure 1.
Figure 1.
Discrimination of the C-SSRS Factor- and Theoretically-Derived Scales against Suicide Attempts in the Follow-Up Period

Source: PubMed

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