Skip to main content

Research Repository

Advanced Search

Suicidality and mood: the impact of trends, seasons, day of the week, and time of day on explicit and implicit cognitions among an online community sample

Freichel, René; O’Shea, Brian A.

Suicidality and mood: the impact of trends, seasons, day of the week, and time of day on explicit and implicit cognitions among an online community sample Thumbnail


Authors

René Freichel



Abstract

Decades of research have established seasonality effects on completed and attempted suicides, with rates increasing in spring. Little advancements have been made to explain this phenomenon, with most studies focusing almost exclusively on the number of suicide attempts and deaths. Using more than six years of data collected among a US, UK, and Canadian online community sample (N > 10,000), we used newly developed Prophet forecasting and autoregressive-integrated moving average time-series models to examine the temporal dynamics of explicit and implicit self-harm cognitions. We created three groups (past suicide attempters; suicide ideation and/or non-suicidal self-injury; no previous self-harm, suicidal thoughts, or behaviors). We found a general increase of negative self-harm cognitions across the six years and seasonality effects for mood and desire to die, particularly among those who previously made a suicide attempt. Negative explicit self-harm cognitions peaked in winter (December), with implicit self-harm showing a lagged peak of two months (February). Moreover, daily negative self-harm cognitions consistently peaked around 4–5 am, with implicit cognitions again showing a lagged effect (1-hour). Limitations include the volunteer sample not being representative and the cross-sectional nature of the data being unable to separate between-subject and within-subject structural trends in the time series. Our findings show that negative explicit and implicit cognitions precede the rise in suicidal behaviors in spring. We proposed a conceptual model of seasonal suicide risk that may offer fertile ground for theoretical advancements, including implications for clinical risk assessment and public policies regarding the availability of health services.

Citation

Freichel, R., & O’Shea, B. A. (2023). Suicidality and mood: the impact of trends, seasons, day of the week, and time of day on explicit and implicit cognitions among an online community sample. Translational Psychiatry, 13, Article 157. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41398-023-02434-1

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Apr 17, 2023
Online Publication Date May 12, 2023
Publication Date May 12, 2023
Deposit Date May 12, 2023
Publicly Available Date May 17, 2023
Journal Translational Psychiatry
Electronic ISSN 2158-3188
Publisher Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 13
Article Number 157
DOI https://doi.org/10.1038/s41398-023-02434-1
Keywords Biological Psychiatry; Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience; Psychiatry and Mental health
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/20566245
Publisher URL https://www.nature.com/articles/s41398-023-02434-1

Files




You might also like



Downloadable Citations