The Netherlands Institute for Social Research/SCP, Research Group Emancipation, Youth and Family Affairs, The Hague, BD, The Netherlands.
Ethn Health. 2010 Oct;15(5):515-30. doi: 10.1080/13557858.2010.494719.
Although Western Europe is becoming increasingly multicultural, ethnic minorities are scarcely included in studies of suicidology. We investigated the prevalence of non-fatal suicidal behavior and examined risk factors in non-western female immigrant adolescents compared to majority female adolescents in the city of Rotterdam, The Netherlands.
We conducted logistic regression on a dataset that consisted of self-reported health and well-being questionnaires filled out by 4527 adolescents of Dutch, South Asian-Surinamese, Moroccan, and Turkish origin. We examined whether young females of specific ethnic groups had elevated risk for attempted suicide. Well-known risk factors in suicidology of social economic class, level of education, life events, abuse, and family context were investigated to verify whether these factors are beneficial to explaining ethnic differences in suicidal behavior. RESULTS; We found that rates of attempted suicide among Turkish and South Asian-Surinamese young women were higher than of Dutch females, while Moroccan females had lower rates than Dutch female adolescents. Physical and sexual abuse, and an impaired family environment, as well as parental psychopathology or parental substance abuse contributed to non-fatal suicidal behavior of females across ethnicities. However, these risk factors, as well as low social economic class and of level of education, did not fully explain the vulnerability of Turkish and South Asian-Surinamese females.
Our findings underscored the need for developing suicide prevention for specific minority females in multicultural cities in Western Europe. Screening programs, which aim at preventing suicide attempts by young immigrant women should include risk factors in the family environment and relationship with the parents as well as physical and sexual abuse. However, the study also showed that the disproportionate risk of Turkish and South Asian-Surinamese females could not be understood by risk factors alone and transpired that the origins of ethnic disparities in suicidal behavior deserve further examination.
尽管西欧日益呈现多元化,但少数民族在自杀学研究中几乎没有被包括在内。我们调查了与荷兰鹿特丹市的多数族裔女性青少年相比,非西方女性移民青少年中非致命性自杀行为的流行情况,并研究了这些青少年中的风险因素。
我们对一个由 4527 名荷兰、南亚苏里南、摩洛哥和土耳其裔青少年填写的自我报告健康和幸福感问卷组成的数据集进行了逻辑回归分析。我们研究了特定族裔群体的年轻女性是否存在自杀未遂的风险增加。我们调查了自杀学中众所周知的社会经济阶层、教育程度、生活事件、虐待和家庭环境等风险因素,以验证这些因素是否有助于解释自杀行为中的种族差异。
我们发现,土耳其裔和南亚苏里南裔年轻女性的自杀未遂率高于荷兰女性,而摩洛哥女性的自杀未遂率则低于荷兰青少年。身体和性虐待以及不良的家庭环境,以及父母的精神病理学或父母的药物滥用,都促成了不同族裔女性的非致命性自杀行为。然而,这些风险因素,以及社会经济阶层和教育程度较低,并不能完全解释土耳其裔和南亚苏里南裔女性的脆弱性。
我们的研究结果强调了在西欧多元文化城市为特定少数族裔女性制定自杀预防措施的必要性。旨在预防年轻移民女性自杀企图的筛查计划应包括家庭环境和与父母的关系中的风险因素,以及身体和性虐待。然而,该研究还表明,土耳其裔和南亚苏里南裔女性不成比例的风险不能仅用风险因素来理解,种族间自杀行为差异的根源值得进一步研究。