Knipe Duleeka W, Carroll Robert, Thomas Kyla H, Pease Anna, Gunnell David, Metcalfe Chris
School of Social and Community Medicine, University of Bristol, Canynge Hall, 39 Whatley Road, Bristol, BS8 2PS, UK.
South Asian Clinical Toxicology Research Collaboration (SACTRC), Faculty of Medicine, University of Peradeniya, Peradeniya, Sri Lanka.
BMC Public Health. 2015 Oct 15;15:1055. doi: 10.1186/s12889-015-2301-5.
Forty percent of the world's suicide deaths occur in low and middle income countries (LAMIC) in Asia. There is a recognition that social factors, such as socioeconomic position (SEP), play an important role in determining suicidal risk in high income countries, but less is known about the association in LAMIC.
The objective of this systematic review was to synthesise existing evidence of the association between SEP and attempted suicide/suicide risk in LAMIC countries in South and South East Asia. Web of Science, MEDLINE, MEDLINE in Process, EMBASE, PsycINFO, and article reference lists/forward citations were searched for eligible studies. Epidemiological studies reporting on the association of individual SEP with suicide and attempted suicide were included. Study quality was assessed using an adapted rating tool and a narrative synthesis was conducted.
Thirty-one studies from nine countries were identified; 31 different measures of SEP were reported, with education being the most frequently recorded. Most studies suggest that lower levels of SEP are associated with an increased risk of suicide/attempted suicide, though findings are not always consistent between and within countries. Over half of the studies included in this review were of moderate/low quality. The SEP risk factors with the most consistent association across studies were asset based measures (e.g. composite measures); education; measures of financial difficulty and subjective measures of financial circumstance. Several studies show a greater than threefold increased risk in lower SEP groups with the largest and most consistent association with subjective measures of financial circumstance.
The current evidence suggests that lower SEP increases the likelihood of suicide/attempted suicide in LAMIC in South and South East Asia. However, the findings are severely limited by study quality; larger better quality studies are therefore needed.
PROSPERO 2014: CRD42014006521.
全球40%的自杀死亡发生在亚洲的低收入和中等收入国家(LAMIC)。人们认识到,社会因素,如社会经济地位(SEP),在高收入国家自杀风险的决定中起着重要作用,但在LAMIC国家中这种关联知之甚少。
本系统评价的目的是综合南亚和东南亚LAMIC国家中SEP与自杀未遂/自杀风险之间关联的现有证据。检索了科学网、MEDLINE、MEDLINE在研数据库、EMBASE、PsycINFO以及文章参考文献列表/向前引用文献,以查找符合条件的研究。纳入报告个体SEP与自杀及自杀未遂关联的流行病学研究。使用经过调整的评分工具评估研究质量,并进行叙述性综合分析。
确定了来自9个国家的31项研究;报告了31种不同的SEP测量方法,其中教育是最常记录的。大多数研究表明,较低的SEP水平与自杀/自杀未遂风险增加相关,尽管不同国家之间以及国家内部的研究结果并不总是一致。本评价纳入的研究中超过一半质量为中等/低等。在各项研究中关联最一致的SEP风险因素是基于资产的测量方法(如综合测量方法);教育;经济困难测量方法和经济状况主观测量方法。几项研究表明,SEP较低组的风险增加了三倍以上,与经济状况主观测量方法的关联最大且最一致。
目前的证据表明,在南亚和东南亚的LAMIC国家中,较低的SEP会增加自杀/自杀未遂的可能性。然而,研究结果受到研究质量的严重限制;因此需要开展规模更大、质量更高的研究。
PROSPERO 2014:CRD42014006521。