Department of Community Medicine and the Injury Control Research Center, PO Box 9190 West Virginia University, Morgantown, West Virginia 26506, USA.
BMC Psychiatry. 2010 May 19;10:35. doi: 10.1186/1471-244X-10-35.
Suicide officially kills approximately 30,000 annually in the United States. Analysis of this leading public health problem is complicated by undercounting. Despite persisting socioeconomic and health disparities, non-Hispanic Blacks and Hispanics register suicide rates less than half that of non-Hispanic Whites.
This cross-sectional study uses multiple cause-of-death data from the US National Center for Health Statistics to assess whether race/ethnicity, psychiatric comorbidity documentation, and other decedent characteristics were associated with differential potential for suicide misclassification. Subjects were 105,946 White, Black, and Hispanic residents aged 15 years and older, dying in the US between 2003 and 2005, whose manner of death was recorded as suicide or injury of undetermined intent. The main outcome measure was the relative odds of potential suicide misclassification, a binary measure of manner of death: injury of undetermined intent (includes misclassified suicides) versus suicide.
Blacks (adjusted odds ratio [AOR], 2.38; 95% confidence interval [CI], 2.22-2.57) and Hispanics (1.17, 1.07-1.28) manifested excess potential suicide misclassification relative to Whites. Decedents aged 35-54 (AOR, 0.88; 95% CI, 0.84-0.93), 55-74 (0.52, 0.49-0.57), and 75+ years (0.51, 0.46-0.57) showed diminished misclassification potential relative to decedents aged 15-34, while decedents with 0-8 years (1.82, 1.75-1.90) and 9-12 years of education (1.43, 1.40-1.46) showed excess potential relative to the most educated (13+ years). Excess potential suicide misclassification was also apparent for decedents without (AOR, 3.12; 95% CI, 2.78-3.51) versus those with psychiatric comorbidity documented on their death certificates, and for decedents whose mode of injury was "less active" (46.33; 43.32-49.55) versus "more active."
Data disparities might explain much of the Black-White suicide rate gap, if not the Hispanic-White gap. Ameliorative action would extend from training in death certification to routine use of psychological autopsies in equivocal-manner-of-death cases.
自杀在美国每年官方死亡人数约为 3 万人。分析这一主要的公共卫生问题很复杂,因为存在漏报。尽管存在持续存在的社会经济和健康方面的差距,但非西班牙裔黑人和西班牙裔的自杀率不到非西班牙裔白人的一半。
本横断面研究使用来自美国国家卫生统计中心的多种死因数据,评估种族/民族、精神疾病合并症记录以及其他死者特征是否与自杀潜在分类错误的差异相关。研究对象为 2003 年至 2005 年期间在美国死亡的年龄在 15 岁及以上的 105946 名白种人、黑人和西班牙裔居民,其死亡方式记录为自杀或意图不明的伤害。主要结局指标是潜在自杀分类错误的相对优势,即死亡方式的二进制指标:意图不明的伤害(包括分类错误的自杀)与自杀。
与白人相比,黑人(调整后的优势比 [AOR],2.38;95%置信区间 [CI],2.22-2.57)和西班牙裔(1.17,1.07-1.28)表现出过度的潜在自杀分类错误。年龄在 35-54 岁(AOR,0.88;95%CI,0.84-0.93)、55-74 岁(0.52,0.49-0.57)和 75 岁及以上(0.51,0.46-0.57)的死者相对于 15-34 岁的死者,自杀分类错误的可能性降低,而受教育程度为 0-8 年(1.82,1.75-1.90)和 9-12 年(1.43,1.40-1.46)的死者与受教育程度最高的(13 年及以上)相比,自杀分类错误的可能性更高。对于没有记录在死亡证明上的精神疾病合并症(AOR,3.12;95%CI,2.78-3.51)或死因模式为“不活跃”(46.33;43.32-49.55)的死者,也明显存在自杀分类错误的可能性。
如果不是西班牙裔与白人之间的差距,那么数据差异可能可以解释大部分黑人与白人之间的自杀率差距。改善措施将从死亡证明的培训扩展到在死因不明的情况下常规使用心理尸检。