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Meaning of Life Questionnaire (MLQ) in Patients Admitted to the Crisis Centre (MSVCAC)

C

Centre Hospitalier Régional Metz-Thionville

Status

Completed

Conditions

Mental Suffering
Questionnaire
Meaning of Life
Suicide

Treatments

Behavioral: Meaning of Life Questionnaire (MLQ)

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05514587
2022-01Obs-CHRMT

Details and patient eligibility

About

Suicide is the highest mortality risk in psychiatry and about the only life-threatening risk associated with the evolution of mental illness. Worldwide, more than 800,000 people die by suicide each year. Although the number of deaths by suicide has decreased in France (from 11,000 in the 1990s to 9,000 today), suicide is still a major public health problem (the French rate is one of the highest in Europe).

The World Health Organisation (WHO) has declared a state of emergency and is pushing each country to develop a global multisectoral strategy for effective suicide prevention. To this end, suicide risk assessment tools have been developed for predictive purposes. However, diagnosis remains difficult and the risk of recidivism remains the fear of the psychiatrist. Questioning the subjects about their vision of their existence and the meaning they give to their life would perhaps help to better understand the psychology of the suicidal person. In recent decades, there has been research on meaning and suicide, and more recently a few studies have attempted to quantitatively investigate meaning as a protective factor. More recently, the COVID epidemic has brought the issue of meaning and suicide prevention to the forefront.

Full description

Suicide is the highest mortality risk in psychiatry and about the only life-threatening risk associated with the evolution of mental illness. Worldwide, more than 800,000 people die by suicide each year. In France, the latest estimates put the number of deaths by suicide at 9,000 per year, with 200,000 attempted suicides treated in emergency departments, leading to between 90,000 and 100,000 hospitalisations. Although the number of deaths by suicide has fallen in France (from 11,000 in the 1990s to 9,000 at present), suicide is still a major public health problem (the French rate remains one of the highest in Europe).

It is estimated that almost half of all suicides consult a general practitioner in the month before they commit suicide. Suicide affects young people as much as adults. It has become a major public health problem among adolescents. This dramatic act is often misunderstood, but almost always reflects psychological suffering, exhaustion and resignation. The World Health Organisation (WHO) has declared a state of emergency and is urging each country to develop a comprehensive multisectoral strategy for effective suicide prevention. To this end, suicide risk assessment tools have been developed with a predictive aim. Vigilance and surveillance systems such as "VigilanS " for suicidal people, structures such as crisis centres, and enhanced community support have been put in place. However, diagnosis remains difficult and the risk of recidivism remains the fear of the psychiatrist.

Suicide is about death, about putting an end to one's suffering by aspiring to a definitive appeasement of tensions. It is also a question of existential claim and it is at this level that the question of the meaning of life arises. Indeed, clinical practice very often confronts the psychiatrist, with suicidal subjects, with statements of the type (even if it is not formulated as clearly as the following sentence): "I want to die so as not to suffer any more and I claim the right to put an end to an existence that no longer has any meaning, I choose to finally find peace". How then can we understand that a person gives himself death because he no longer finds a reason to exist? And conversely, that having a reason to live gives a purpose to our existence and can help prevent suicide? It is in this sense that a hypothesis has been put forward over the last few decades, based on the principle that questioning subjects about the vision they have of their existence and the meaning they give to their lives would perhaps help to better understand the psychology of the suicidal person and to prevent them from committing suicide. This reflection, which has its roots in philosophy, has now led to empirical research that has endeavoured to study and take into account, but this time in a quantitative manner and no longer confining itself to philosophical reflection, the question of meaning as a protective factor against suicide: we shall return to this later in the course of this work. Finally, it should be noted that the COVID epidemic has brought the question of meaning and suicide prevention to the forefront, as evidenced by the deleterious impact of the COVID epidemic on adolescents.

Enrollment

119 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Patients admitted to the Crisis Centre of the CHR Bel Air Hospital or the CAC Jury
  • Male or female, at least 18 years old
  • Hospitalized at the CAC-SPUL Bel Air or CAC de Jury
  • Patient not objecting to participate in the study

Exclusion criteria

  • Refused to take part in the study
  • Not being able to answer the questionnaire (lack of language skills, cognitive problems related to their pathology, etc.).

Trial design

119 participants in 3 patient groups

Suicidal act
Description:
Patients who has committed a suicidal act
Treatment:
Behavioral: Meaning of Life Questionnaire (MLQ)
Suicidal thoughts without acting on them
Description:
Patients with suicidal thoughts without acting on them
Treatment:
Behavioral: Meaning of Life Questionnaire (MLQ)
No suicidal ideation or acting out
Description:
Patients without suicidal ideation or acting out of patients in crisis admitted to the Crisis Center
Treatment:
Behavioral: Meaning of Life Questionnaire (MLQ)

Trial contacts and locations

2

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Central trial contact

Arpiné El NAR

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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