Research

The Relationship Between Future Self-Continuity and Suicide Risk in Military Veterans with Traumatic Brain Injury

Authors:

Abstract

Veterans with Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) have an increased risk for suicide. A lack of Future-Self Continuity (FSC), which refers to the sense of “psychological connectedness” that a person has between their present and future selves, has also been associated with suicide risk. For this study, 308 U.S. military veterans, 39 of whom self-reported a TBI, completed a series of questionnaires to assess future self-continuity and suicidality. The results replicated previous findings in that TBI and low future self-continuity were individually associated with increased suicidality. Additionally, future self-continuity was found to have a moderating effect on TBI, in that TBI was associated with increased suicide risk only when future self-continuity was low or moderate. When future self-continuity was high, TBI was not associated with increased suicide risk. Examination of the three subcomponents of future self-continuity revealed that FSC-Vividness and FSC-Positivity moderated the TBI-suicidality relationship, while FSC-Similarity had no significant moderating effect. These results suggest that high future self-continuity may be a protective factor for suicide risk among veterans with a TBI diagnosis. Understanding this relationship between TBI, future self-continuity, and suicidality could help enhance suicide prevention efforts.

Keywords:

suicidetraumatic brain injuryfuture self-continuityveterans
  • Year: 2022
  • Volume: 8 Issue: 3
  • Page/Article: 120–127
  • DOI: 10.21061/jvs.v8i3.318
  • Submitted on 10 Nov 2021
  • Accepted on 10 Jan 2022
  • Published on 29 Sep 2022
  • Peer Reviewed