One in four women with ADHD has attempted suicide

Authored by eurekalert.org and submitted by rustoo

Women with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder are eight times more likely to attempt suicide, while men with ADHD are four and a half times more likely; parental violence and substance dependence increase the prevalence of suicide attempts

Toronto, CANADA - Attention Deficit Hyperactive Disorder (ADHD) can have negative consequences on mental health into adulthood. A nationally representative Canadian study reported that the lifetime prevalence of suicide attempts was much higher for women who had ADHD (24%) compared to women who had not (3%). Men with ADHD were also more likely to have attempted suicide compared to men without ADHD (9% vs. 2%).

"ADHD casts a very long shadow. Even when we took into account history of mental illness, and the higher levels of poverty and early adversities that adults with ADHD often experience, those with ADHD still had 56% higher odds of having attempted suicide than their peers without ADHD" reported lead author Esme Fuller-Thomson, Professor at University of Toronto's Factor-Inwentash Faculty of Social Work and Director of the Institute for Life Course and Aging.

Because ADHD is more common among men than among women, little research or clinical attention has focused on women with the disorder. In this study, women with ADHD had more than twice the odds of suicide attempts compared to men with ADHD.

"Our finding that one in four Canadian women with ADHD had attempted suicide highlights the urgency of providing adequate mental health supports across the life course to this vulnerable and neglected group," said Lauren Carrique, a recent graduate of University of Toronto's Masters in Social Work (MSW) program who is a social worker at Toronto General Hospital.

Adults with ADHD who had been exposed to chronic parental domestic violence had triple the odds of suicide attempts compared to their peers with ADHD who had not experienced that childhood adversity. Parental domestic violence was defined as "chronic" if it had occurred more than 10 times before the respondent was age 16.

"The cross-sectional nature of this study prohibits our ability to determine possible causality; the relationship between chronic parental domestic violence and suicide attempts could flow in either direction," stated co-author Raphaël Nahar Rivière, a medical resident in anesthesiology at the University of Toronto.

"We speculate that violent parental conflict may cause extreme stress for the child with ADHD and predispose these individuals to mental illness and suicidal thoughts. In addition, the challenges of raising a child with ADHD who is struggling with severe mental health issues may cause parental conflict, which may escalate into domestic violence."

The study examined a nationally representative sample of 21,744 Canadians, of whom 529 reported they had been diagnosed with ADHD. Data were drawn from the Canadian Community Health Survey-Mental Health.

"The disturbingly high prevalence of suicide attempts among people with ADHD underline the importance of health professionals screening patients with ADHD for mental illness and suicidal thoughts," said co-author Senyo Agbeyaka, a recent University of Toronto MSW graduate who is a social worker at University Health Network.

"Knowing that women with ADHD who have experienced childhood adversities and adults with a history of substance dependence and/or depression are particularly vulnerable to attempting suicide will hopefully help clinicians improve targeting and outreach to this population."

The paper was published online this month in the journal Archives of Suicide Research.

Article details: "The Dark Side of ADHD: Factors Associated With Suicide Attempts Among Those With ADHD in a National Representative Canadian Sample " by Esme Fuller-Thomson, Raphaël Nahar Rivière, Lauren Carrique, and Senyo Agbeyaka Archives of Suicide Research

A copy of the paper is available to credentialed journalists upon request. Please contact [email protected].

Professor, Factor-Inwentash Faculty of Social Work

Director, Institute for Life Course & Aging

drexwork on December 22nd, 2020 at 17:24 UTC »

Also, ADHD folks have a shorter life expectancy across the board. From what I understand from my research.

Silaquix on December 22nd, 2020 at 16:23 UTC »

ADHD also has a pretty common co-morbidity rate with other disorders such as autism, depression, anxiety and even bipolar. I'm bipolar and we have an estimated attempted suicide rate of up to 60% and 20% completed rate. Add in ADHD and it gets even worse. Here's an article about ADHD and co-morbidity.

rsjc852 on December 22nd, 2020 at 15:55 UTC »

It absolutely blows my mind how they did not link back to the free paper. Link to full article from the official journal:

https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/13811118.2020.1856258?src=

Objectives and sample size data for those interested:

The objectives of the current study were (1) to document the prevalence of suicide attempts among adults with and without ADHD; (2) to investigate the degree to which the association between ADHD and suicide attempts is attenuated by sex, race, age, household income and education, learning disabilities, three adverse childhood experiences (chronic physical abuse, parental domestic violence, and/or childhood sexual abuse), and lifetime history of substance abuse and mental illness; and (3) to ascertain which variables are correlated with suicide attempts among adults with ADHD.

Our sample was restricted to adults with complete data on all variables included in the logistic regression analyses. For objectives 1 and 2, the sample included 10,032 men and 11,712 women. For objective 3, only the 529 respondents with ADHD were included.

Things to note:

This study was an analysis of a government study including only Canadian individuals - excluding aboriginals, native americans on-reserve, the institutionalized (not mentioned in this study, but in the CCHS paper this data is taken from) and Canadian Armed Forces members. These exclusions comprised about 3% of the population in 2012, according to the CCHS study. Note that Canadians have a much lower rate of suicide than Americans. Approximately 25.9% lower according to this 2020 study.

The study used for the analysis still used the outdated "ADD" term, and did not differentiate between the ADHD-PI, ADHD-HI, and ADHD-C subtypes. The prevalence of suicidal ideation between different ADHD subtypes would certainly be an interesting topic for future researchers to study.

Edit:

Here is the original CCHS study this paper used for analysis: Link