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The Significance of the Suicide Gesture in the Military
GARY J. TUCKER; E. R. GORMAN
Am J Psychiatry 1967;123:854-861.
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Department of Psychiatry, Yale University School of Medicine, 333 Cedar Street, New Haven, Conn.
U. S. Naval Support Activity, Naples, Italy
1966-67, American Psychiatric Association
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Abstract
The suicide gesture is most frequently a communicative act directed at the patient's environment. This study describes a group of military patients who have chosen this dramatic form of communication and highlights two important factors in their personality make-up: their intense need to resolve their perceived conflict and their sense of social isolation. Other distinctive demographic characteristics are also described.Abstract Teaser
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