London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine (LSHTM), Public Health and Policy, 36 Gordon Square, London WC1H 0DP, United Kingdom.
Soc Sci Med. 2011 Jul;73(1):79-86. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2011.05.006. Epub 2011 May 27.
Suicidal behaviours are one of the most important contributors to the global burden of disease among women, but little is known about prevalence and modifiable risk factors in low and middle income countries. We use data from the WHO multi-country study on women's health and domestic violence against women to examine the prevalence of suicidal thoughts and attempts, and relationships between suicide attempts and mental health status, child sexual abuse, partner violence and other variables. Population representative cross-sectional household surveys were conducted from 2000-2003 in 13 provincial (more rural) and city (urban) sites in Brazil, Ethiopia, Japan, Namibia, Peru, Samoa, Serbia, Thailand and Tanzania. 20967 women aged 15-49 years participated. Prevalence of lifetime suicide attempts, lifetime suicidal thoughts, and suicidal thoughts in the past four weeks were calculated, and multivariate logistic regression models were fit to examine factors associated with suicide attempts in each site. Prevalence of lifetime suicide attempts ranged from 0.8% (Tanzania) to 12.0% (Peru city); lifetime thoughts of suicide from 7.2% (Tanzania province) to 29.0% (Peru province), and thoughts in the past four weeks from 1.9% (Serbia) to 13.6% (Peru province). 25-50% of women with suicidal thoughts in the past four weeks had also visited a health worker in that time. The most consistent risk factors for suicide attempts after adjusting for probable common mental health disorders were: intimate partner violence, non-partner physical violence, ever being divorced, separated or widowed, childhood sexual abuse and having a mother who had experienced intimate partner violence. Mental health policies and services must recognise the consistent relationship between violence and suicidality in women in low and middle income countries. Training health sector workers to recognize and respond to the consequences of violence may substantially reduce the health burden associated with suicidal behaviour.
自杀行为是导致女性全球疾病负担的最重要因素之一,但在中低收入国家,人们对其流行程度和可改变的风险因素知之甚少。我们利用世界卫生组织多国家妇女健康和家庭暴力研究的数据,研究了自杀念头和自杀企图的流行程度,以及自杀企图与心理健康状况、儿童性虐待、伴侣暴力和其他变量之间的关系。2000-2003 年,在巴西、埃塞俄比亚、日本、纳米比亚、秘鲁、萨摩亚、塞尔维亚、泰国和坦桑尼亚的 13 个省级(更农村)和市级(城市)地点进行了具有代表性的横断面家庭调查。共有 20967 名 15-49 岁的妇女参加。计算了终生自杀企图、终生自杀念头和过去四周的自杀念头的流行率,并建立了多变量逻辑回归模型,以检查每个地点与自杀企图相关的因素。终生自杀企图的流行率从坦桑尼亚的 0.8%到秘鲁城市的 12.0%不等;从坦桑尼亚省的 7.2%到秘鲁省的 29.0%不等,以及过去四周的想法从塞尔维亚的 1.9%到秘鲁省的 13.6%不等。过去四周有自杀念头的妇女中,有 25-50%的人在这段时间也去看过卫生工作者。在调整了可能的常见心理健康障碍后,自杀企图的最一致风险因素是:亲密伴侣暴力、非伴侣身体暴力、曾经离婚、分居或丧偶、儿童性虐待以及母亲曾经历亲密伴侣暴力。精神卫生政策和服务必须认识到中低收入国家妇女中暴力与自杀意念之间的一致关系。培训卫生部门工作人员识别和应对暴力后果,可能会大大减轻与自杀行为相关的健康负担。