May Philip A, Van Winkle Nancy W, Williams Mary B, McFeeley Patricia J, DeBruyn Lemyra M, Serna Patricia
Center on Alcoholism, Substance Abuse, and Addictions, The University of New Mexico, Albuquerque 87106, USA.
Suicide Life Threat Behav. 2002 Fall;32(3):240-55. doi: 10.1521/suli.32.3.240.22172.
The relationship between alcohol use prior to suicide was explored among American Indian decedents in New Mexico for the years 1980 through 1998. The suicide data were collected from New Mexico Vital Statistics and toxicology reports from the New Mexico Office of the Medical Investigator and matched on a case-by-case basis. Detailed analyses were undertaken for all cases of resident New Mexico Indians from the Navajo, Pueblo, and Apache cultures. Alcohol was detected in 69% of all suicides of American Indians with some variance by major tribal cultural groups (range = 62.1% to 84.4%). This is higher than in suicides among the overall New Mexico population (44.3%). The mean blood alcohol concentration (BAC) of the drinking Indian decedents at suicide was 0.198 (+/- SD of .088). Mean BACs were high for both males (0.199) and females (0.180) who had been drinking. Over 90% of the Indian decedents who had been drinking had BACs greater than the legal intoxication level of 0.08. The Navajo had the lowest percentage of cases that were alcohol involved, and their mean BAC was lower than the other two cultural groups. Alcohol use for completed suicides also varied somewhat by age, sex, method of suicide, and place of occurrence, but very little by whether the decedent was an on or off reservation resident. Analyses indicated that alcohol use prior to suicide was significantly more associated with male suicides than for females, and it was negatively correlated for those who died by overdose and also those using other drugs at suicide. Otherwise, alcohol use did not significantly differentiate American Indian suicides by age, use of firearms, hanging, use of other methods, or residence, for the presence of alcohol was a factor very commonly associated with all of these variables. Heavy alcohol consumption is, therefore, an important factor in over two thirds of all completed suicides among the Indians of New Mexico.
1980年至1998年间,在新墨西哥州的美国印第安人死者中,对自杀前饮酒情况的关系进行了探讨。自杀数据收集自新墨西哥州生命统计数据以及新墨西哥州医学调查员办公室的毒理学报告,并逐案进行匹配。对来自纳瓦霍、普韦布洛和阿帕奇文化的新墨西哥州印第安居民的所有病例进行了详细分析。在所有美国印第安人自杀案例中,69%检测出酒精,主要部落文化群体存在一定差异(范围为62.1%至84.4%)。这一比例高于新墨西哥州总体人口的自杀案例(44.3%)。自杀时饮酒的印第安死者的平均血液酒精浓度(BAC)为0.198(标准差为0.088)。饮酒的男性(0.199)和女性(0.180)的平均BAC都很高。超过90%饮酒的印第安死者的BAC高于法定醉酒水平0.08。纳瓦霍族涉及酒精的案例比例最低,其平均BAC低于其他两个文化群体。自杀时的饮酒情况在年龄、性别、自杀方式和发生地点方面也存在一定差异,但死者是保留地居民还是非保留地居民对饮酒情况影响很小。分析表明,自杀前饮酒与男性自杀的关联显著高于女性,与过量用药致死以及自杀时使用其他药物的情况呈负相关。否则,饮酒情况在按年龄、使用枪支、上吊、使用其他方式或居住情况划分的美国印第安人自杀案例中并无显著差异,因为酒精的存在是与所有这些变量都非常常见相关的一个因素。因此,大量饮酒是新墨西哥州印第安人所有自杀案例中超过三分之二的一个重要因素。