Population Research Unit, Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland.
Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research, Rostock, Germany.
J Epidemiol Community Health. 2020 Jun;74(6):510-518. doi: 10.1136/jech-2019-213555. Epub 2020 Apr 1.
External and alcohol-related mortality is elevated postseparation, but the role of poor mental health in explaining this excess is unclear. We assess postseparation excess mortality by union type and over time since separation and examine how psychiatric morbidity present already before separation, during the separation process and after separation attenuates this excess.
Using individual-level register data from 1995 to 2012, we followed 311 751 Finns in long-term unions. Psychiatric morbidity was identified from dates of prescription medication purchases and hospital admissions, separations from dates of moving out of joint households and mortality from the Death Register. Cox regression was used to analyse postseparation mortality controlling for psychiatric morbidity before, during and after separation.
External and alcohol-related excess mortality is most pronounced immediately after separation, particularly among men, and is much larger following marital than non-marital separation. After sociodemographic factors are adjusted for, further adjustment for psychiatric morbidity attenuates the excess by about 25%. Psychiatric morbidity poorly explains alcohol-related postseparation excess mortality, but for suicide mortality, adjustment for psychiatric morbidity reduces the excess by about 40% among men and 50% among women. Among women, this is largely due to psychiatric morbidity present already before separation, whereas among men the attenuation is also due to psychiatric morbidity during the separation process and after it.
Separation may exacerbate the problems of people already in poor mental health, and relationship dynamics should thus be considered during treatment. Particularly among men separation is a risk factor for suicide even without pre-existing mental health problems.
离婚后,外部原因和与酒精相关的死亡率上升,但精神健康状况不佳在多大程度上导致这种死亡率升高尚不清楚。本研究通过评估不同类型的婚姻关系和自离婚以来的时间变化,来评估离婚后的超额死亡率,并探讨在离婚前、离婚过程中和离婚后出现的精神疾病对这种超额死亡率的影响。
使用 1995 年至 2012 年的个人层面登记数据,我们对 311751 名处于长期婚姻关系中的芬兰人进行了随访。从处方药物购买和住院记录中确定精神疾病,从搬离共同住所的日期中确定离婚,从死亡登记中确定死亡。采用 Cox 回归分析控制离婚前、离婚中和离婚后出现的精神疾病,分析离婚后的死亡率。
离婚后,尤其是男性,外部原因和与酒精相关的死亡率显著升高,且与婚姻关系破裂相比,非婚姻关系破裂后的死亡率更高。在调整了社会人口因素后,进一步调整离婚前、离婚中和离婚后的精神疾病状况,可使超额死亡率降低约 25%。精神疾病状况并不能很好地解释与酒精相关的离婚后超额死亡率,但对于自杀死亡率,调整精神疾病状况可使男性的超额死亡率降低约 40%,女性的超额死亡率降低约 50%。在女性中,这主要归因于离婚前已存在的精神疾病,而在男性中,这种降低也归因于离婚过程中和离婚后的精神疾病状况。
离婚可能会使本就精神健康状况不佳的人病情恶化,因此在治疗过程中应考虑到人际关系的动态变化。尤其是对于男性而言,即使没有预先存在的心理健康问题,离婚也是自杀的一个风险因素。