Division of Community Health and Humanities, Faculty of Medicine, Memorial University, Prince Philip Drive, St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador, A1B 3V6, Canada.
Labrador Institute of Memorial University, P.O. Box 490, Stn. B, 219 Hamilton River Road, Happy Valley-Goose Bay, Newfoundland and Labrador, A0P 1E0, Canada.
BMC Public Health. 2018 Nov 27;18(1):1320. doi: 10.1186/s12889-018-6224-9.
Indigenous peoples in Canada experience disproportionate rates of suicide compared to non-Indigenous populations. Indigenous communities and organizations have designed local and regional approaches to prevention, and the federal government has developed a national suicide prevention framework. However, public health systems continue to face challenges in monitoring the population burden of suicide and suicidal behaviour. National health data systems lack Indigenous identifiers, do not capture data from some regions, and do not routinely engage Indigenous communities in data governance. These challenges hamper efforts to detect changes in population-level outcomes and assess the impact of suicide prevention activities. Consequently, this limits the ability to achieve public health prevention goals and reduce suicide rates and rate inequities.This paper provides a critical analysis of the challenges related to suicide surveillance in Canada and assesses the strengths and limitations of existing data infrastructure for monitoring outcomes in Indigenous communities. To better understand these challenges, we discuss the policy context for suicide surveillance and examine the survey and administrative data sources that are commonly used in public health surveillance. We then review recent data on the epidemiology of suicide and suicidal behaviour among Indigenous populations, and identify challenges related to national surveillance.To enhance capacity for suicide surveillance, we propose strategies to better track progress in Indigenous suicide prevention. Specifically, we recommend establishing an independent community and scientific governing council, integrating Indigenous identifiers into population health datasets, increasing geographic coverage, improving suicide data quality, comprehensiveness, and timeliness, and developing a platform for making suicide data accessible to all stakeholders. Overall, the strategies we propose can build on the strengths of the existing national suicide surveillance system by adopting a collaborative and inclusive governance model that recognizes the stake Indigenous communities have in suicide prevention.
加拿大的土著人民自杀率与非土著人口相比不成比例。土著社区和组织已经设计了预防自杀的地方和区域办法,联邦政府也制定了国家预防自杀框架。然而,公共卫生系统在监测自杀和自杀行为的人口负担方面仍然面临挑战。国家卫生数据系统缺乏土著标识符,无法从某些地区获取数据,也没有定期让土著社区参与数据治理。这些挑战阻碍了检测人口层面结果变化和评估预防自杀活动影响的努力。因此,这限制了实现公共卫生预防目标以及降低自杀率和减少不平等的能力。本文批判性地分析了加拿大在自杀监测方面面临的挑战,并评估了现有的监测土著社区结果的数据基础设施的优势和局限性。为了更好地理解这些挑战,我们讨论了自杀监测的政策背景,并审查了公共卫生监测中常用的调查和行政数据源。然后,我们回顾了有关土著人群中自杀和自杀行为的流行病学的最新数据,并确定了与国家监测相关的挑战。为了增强自杀监测能力,我们提出了更好地跟踪土著预防自杀进展的策略。具体而言,我们建议建立一个独立的社区和科学管理委员会,将土著标识符纳入人口健康数据集,扩大地理覆盖范围,提高自杀数据的质量、全面性和及时性,并开发一个平台,使所有利益攸关方都能获得自杀数据。总的来说,我们提出的策略可以利用现有的国家自杀监测系统的优势,采用一种协作和包容的治理模式,承认土著社区在预防自杀方面的利益。