Tai, A., Pincham, H., Basu, A., & Large, M. (2025).
The Australian and New Zealand journal of psychiatry,
48674251348372. Advance online publication.
Abstract
Background: Rates of suicide following discharge from psychiatric hospitals are extraordinarily high in the first week post-discharge and then decline steeply over time. The aim of this meta-analysis is to evaluate the strength of risk factors for suicide after psychiatric discharge and to investigate the association between the strength of risk factors and duration of study follow-up.
Methods: A PROSPERO-registered meta-analysis of observational studies was performed in accordance with PRISMA guidelines. Post-discharge suicide risk factors reported five or more times were synthesised using a random-effects model. Mixed-effects meta-regression was used to examine whether the strength of suicide risk factors could be explained by duration of study follow-up.
Results: Searches located 83 primary studies. From this, 63 risk estimates were meta-analysed. The strongest risk factors were previous self-harm (odds ratio = 2.75, 95% confidence interval = [2.37, 3.19]), suicidal ideation (odds ratio = 2.15, 95% confidence interval = [1.73, 2.68]), depressive symptoms (odds ratio = 1.84, 95% confidence interval = [1.48, 2.30]), and high-risk categorisation (odds ratio = 7.65, 95% confidence interval = [5.48, 10.67]). Significantly protective factors included age ⩽30, age ⩾65, post-traumatic stress disorder, and dementia. The effect sizes for the strongest post-discharge suicide risk factors did not decline over longer periods of follow-up.
Conclusion: The effect sizes of post-discharge suicide risk factors were generally modest, suggesting that clinical risk factors may have limited value in distinguishing between high-risk and low-risk groups. The highly elevated rates of suicide immediately after discharge and their subsequent decline remain unexplained.