Orui Masatsugu, Harada Shuichiro, Hayashi Mizuho
Sendai City Mental Health and Welfare Center, 1-6 Sankyozawa, Aramaaki, Aoba-ku, Sendai, 980-0845, Japan,
Environ Health Prev Med. 2014 Nov;19(6):459-66. doi: 10.1007/s12199-014-0418-2. Epub 2014 Oct 22.
Devastating disasters may increase suicide rates due to mental distress. Previous domestic studies have reported decreased suicide rates among men following disasters. Few reports are available regarding factors associated with disasters, making it difficult to discuss how these events affect suicide rates. This study aimed to observe changes in suicide rates in disaster-stricken and neighboring areas following the Great East Japan Earthquake, and examine associations between suicide rates and economic factors.
Monthly suicide rates were observed from March 2009 to February 2013, during which time the earthquake occurred on March, 2011. Data were included from disaster-stricken (Iwate, Miyagi, and Fukushima Prefectures) and neighboring (control: Aomori, Akita, and Yamagata Prefectures) areas. The association between changes in suicide rates and economic variables was evaluated based on the number of bankruptcy cases and ratio of effective job offers.
In disaster-stricken areas, post-disaster male suicide rates decreased during the 24 months following the earthquake. This trend differed relative to control areas. Female suicide rates increased during the first seven months. Multiple regression analysis showed that bankruptcy cases (β = 0.386, p = 0.038) and ratio of effective job offers (β = -0.445, p = 0.018) were only significantly associated with male post-disaster suicide rates in control areas.
Post-disaster suicide rates differed by gender following the earthquake. Our findings suggest that considering gender differences might be important for developing future post-disaster suicide prevention measures. This ecological study revealed that increasing effective job offers and decreasing bankruptcy cases can affect protectively male suicide rates in control areas.
毁灭性灾难可能因精神痛苦而导致自杀率上升。此前国内研究报告称,灾难后男性自杀率有所下降。关于与灾难相关因素的报告较少,因此难以讨论这些事件如何影响自杀率。本研究旨在观察东日本大地震后受灾地区和邻近地区的自杀率变化,并研究自杀率与经济因素之间的关联。
观察2009年3月至2013年2月的月度自杀率,地震发生在2011年3月。数据包括受灾地区(岩手县、宫城县和福岛县)和邻近地区(对照:青森县、秋田县和山形县)。根据破产案件数量和有效工作岗位提供率评估自杀率变化与经济变量之间的关联。
在受灾地区,地震后的24个月内男性灾后自杀率下降。这一趋势与对照地区不同。女性自杀率在最初七个月上升。多元回归分析显示,破产案件(β = 0.386,p = 0.038)和有效工作岗位提供率(β = -0.445,p = 0.018)仅与对照地区男性灾后自杀率显著相关。
地震后自杀率因性别而异。我们的研究结果表明,考虑性别差异可能对制定未来的灾后自杀预防措施很重要。这项生态学研究表明,增加有效工作岗位提供率和减少破产案件数量可以对对照地区男性自杀率起到保护作用。