Talk to the Veterans Crisis Line now
U.S. flag
An official website of the United States government

VA Health Systems Research

Go to the VA ORD website
Go to the QUERI website

HSR Citation Abstract

Search | Search by Center | Search by Source | Keywords in Title

Association Between Use of Services To Address Adverse Social Determinants of Health and Documented Suicide Attempt Among Patients in the Veterans Health Administration.

Blosnich JR, DeRussy A, Richman JS, Dichter ME, True G, Montgomery AE. Association Between Use of Services To Address Adverse Social Determinants of Health and Documented Suicide Attempt Among Patients in the Veterans Health Administration. Journal of community health. 2025 Apr 1 DOI: 10.1007/s10900-025-01467-5.

Dimensions for VA is a web-based tool available to VA staff that enables detailed searches of published research and research projects.

If you have VA-Intranet access, click here for more information vaww.hsrd.research.va.gov/dimensions/

VA staff not currently on the VA network can access Dimensions by registering for an account using their VA email address.
   Search Dimensions for VA for this citation
* Don't have VA-internal network access or a VA email address? Try searching the free-to-the-public version of Dimensions



Abstract:

Suicide prevention is a top priority for the US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA), and suicide is often associated with adverse social factors (e.g., financial, legal, and housing problems). The VA provides social services integrated with healthcare services, which may increase the opportunities to detect and document suicide attempt in EHR records. Using VA administrative data, we examined three cohorts of all patients from 2014 to 2018 who had housing instability (n = 659,987), justice involvement (n = 200,487), and unemployment (n = 346,556). Administrative records were used to determine ordinal indicators of receipt of VA social services (no services, low, or high). The outcome was suicide attempt noted in the healthcare record (i.e., documented suicide attempt) in the 1-6 months following the incident adverse social factor. We conducted logistic regressions utilizing a discrete-time survival framework with person-month as the unit of analysis, which facilitated accounting for covariates while isolating the independent association of social service utilization. After adjusting for covariates, high receipt of housing services (vs. no services) was significantly associated with documented suicide attempt during the 6-month observation period (aOR = 1.14, 95%CI = 1.06-1.22). A similar association was observed for high vs. no use of justice programs (aOR 1.24; 95% CI:1.12-1.37). There was no significant association between employment services utilization and documented suicide attempt during the 6-month observation period. Our finding that utilization of social services as positively associated with documented suicide attempt likely reflects increased suicide attempt surveillance and documentation with social service involvement. Future research should explore operationalizing patient-level distress in administrative data.





Questions about the HSR website? Email the Web Team

Any health information on this website is strictly for informational purposes and is not intended as medical advice. It should not be used to diagnose or treat any condition.