Koivumaa-Honkanen H, Honkanen R, Viinamäki H, Heikkilä K, Kaprio J, Koskenvuo M
Department of Psychiatry, Kuopio University Hospital, Kuopio, Finland.
Am J Psychiatry. 2001 Mar;158(3):433-9. doi: 10.1176/appi.ajp.158.3.433.
The authors investigated whether self-reported life satisfaction predicted suicide over a period of 20 years (1976-1995) in adults unselected for mental health status.
A nationwide sample of adults aged 18-64 years (N=29,173) from the Finnish Twin Cohort responded to a health questionnaire that included a life satisfaction scale (score range=4-20, with higher scores indicating greater dissatisfaction) that covered four items: interest in life, happiness, general ease of living, and feeling of loneliness. "Dissatisfied" subjects (life satisfaction score=12-20) were compared to "satisfied" subjects (score=4-6). Mortality data were derived from the national registry and analyzed with Cox regression.
Dissatisfaction at baseline (life satisfaction score=12-20) was associated with a higher risk of suicide throughout the 20-year follow-up period (age-adjusted hazard ratio=3.02, 95% confidence interval [CI]=1.83-4.98). The association was somewhat stronger in the first decade (hazard ratio=4.46, 95% CI=1.95-10.20) than in the second (hazard ratio=2.34, 95% CI=1.24-4.45). A dose-response relationship was also found. Men with the highest degrees of dissatisfaction (life satisfaction score=19-20) were 24.85 times as prone to commit suicide as satisfied men during the first 10 years of the follow-up period. Throughout the entire follow-up, life dissatisfaction still predicted suicide after adjusting for age, sex, baseline health status, alcohol consumption, smoking status, and physical activity (hazard ratio=1.74, 95% CI=1.02-2.97). Subjects who reported dissatisfaction at baseline and again 6 years later showed a high suicide risk (hazard ratio=6.84, 95% CI=1.99-23.50) compared to those who repeatedly reported satisfaction.
Life dissatisfaction has a long-term effect on the risk of suicide, and this seems to be partly mediated through poor health behavior. Life satisfaction seems to be a composite health indicator.
作者调查了在未因心理健康状况而进行筛选的成年人中,自我报告的生活满意度是否能预测20年(1976 - 1995年)期间的自杀情况。
从芬兰双胞胎队列中选取了一个全国性的18 - 64岁成年人样本(N = 29173),他们对一份健康问卷做出了回应,该问卷包括一个生活满意度量表(得分范围 = 4 - 20,得分越高表明不满程度越高),涵盖四个项目:生活兴趣、幸福度、总体生活舒适度和孤独感。将“不满意”的受试者(生活满意度得分 = 12 - 20)与“满意”的受试者(得分 = 4 - 6)进行比较。死亡率数据来自国家登记处,并采用Cox回归进行分析。
在整个20年的随访期内,基线时的不满意(生活满意度得分 = 12 - 20)与较高的自杀风险相关(年龄调整后的风险比 = 3.02,95%置信区间[CI] = 1.83 - 4.98)。这种关联在第一个十年(风险比 = 4.46,95% CI = 1.95 - 10.20)比第二个十年(风险比 = 2.34,95% CI = 1.24 - 4.45)更强。还发现了剂量反应关系。在随访期的前10年中,极度不满意(生活满意度得分 = 19 - 20)的男性自杀倾向是满意男性的24.85倍。在整个随访期间,在调整了年龄、性别、基线健康状况、饮酒量、吸烟状况和身体活动后,生活不满意仍然可以预测自杀(风险比 = 1.74,95% CI = 1.02 - 2.97)。与那些多次报告满意的受试者相比,在基线时报告不满意且6年后再次报告不满意的受试者显示出高自杀风险(风险比 = 6.84,95% CI = 1.99 - 23.50)。
生活不满意对自杀风险有长期影响,而且这似乎部分是通过不良健康行为介导的。生活满意度似乎是一个综合健康指标。