Background
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High place phenomenon, obsessive-compulsive symptoms and suicidality

Journal: Frontiers in Psychiatry (16640640)Year: 2025Volume: 16Issue:
Asgari Z.Naghavi A.a Abbasi A. Teismann T.
Gold • GreenDOI:10.3389/fpsyt.2025.1653961Language: English

Abstract

Background: The high place phenomenon (HPP), referring to a sudden urge to jump when standing in a high place, occurs frequently in both suicidal and non-suicidal individuals. Despite apparent similarities, researchers have not yet examined potential associations with obsessive-compulsive symptoms, nor has the phenomenon been explored in a non-Western society. Methods: The study comprises two samples of Iranian adults: An online sample including N = 257 participants (54% male; Mage=37.03, SDage= 11.51) and a sample of mobility impaired participants including N = 233 participants (56.2% male; Mage=37.84, SDage= 9.75, range: 18–68 years). All participants filled out questionnaires on experiences with the high place phenomenon, depression, suicidal ideation/behavior, anxiety sensitivity and obsessive-compulsive symptoms. Results: Between 39% and 62% of participants reported being familiar with the HPP. In both samples, obsessive-compulsive symptoms showed a significant association with the severity of the phenomenon, even after accounting for depression, suicidal ideation/behavior, and anxiety sensitivity. The presence of the HPP was only associated with obsessive-compulsive symptoms in one of the two samples. Conclusion: Findings point to the cross-cultural nature of the HPP. Furthermore, the association between obsessive-compulsive symptoms and the HPP speaks to a conceptualization of the HPP as being part of the phenomenological field of (subsyndromal) OCD symptoms. Copyright © 2025 Asgari, Naghavi, Abbasi, Ertle, Wiesmann and Teismann.