School of Health Administration (Hajizadeh, Hu), and Department of Community Health and Epidemiology (Asada), and Department of Psychiatry and School of Nursing (Bombay), Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS
School of Health Administration (Hajizadeh, Hu), and Department of Community Health and Epidemiology (Asada), and Department of Psychiatry and School of Nursing (Bombay), Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS.
CMAJ Open. 2021 Mar 8;9(1):E215-E223. doi: 10.9778/cmajo.20200177. Print 2021 Jan-Mar.
Indigenous people are disproportionately affected by mental health issues in Canada. We investigated factors underlying the difference in psychological distress and suicidal behaviours between non-Indigenous and Indigenous populations living off-reserve in Canada.
We conducted a cross-sectional study using data from the 2012 Canadian Community Health Survey - Mental Health. Respondents were aged 18 years and older. We measured the variation in psychological distress (10-item Kessler Psychological Distress Scale scores, ranging from 10 [no distress] to 50 [severe distress]) and the prevalence of lifetime suicidal ideation and suicide plan between the Indigenous and non-Indigenous populations and explained these differences using the Blinder-Oaxaca approach.
The overall response rate for the survey was 68.9%, comprising 18 300 respondents (933 Indigenous and 17 367 non-Indigenous adults). We found lower mean psychological distress scores among non-Indigenous people than among Indigenous people (15.1 v. 16.1, < 0.001) and a lower prevalence of lifetime suicidal ideation (9.2% v. 16.8%, < 0.001) and plan (2.3% v. 6.8%, < 0.001). We found that if socioeconomic status among Indigenous people were made to be similar to that of the non-Indigenous population, the differences in mean psychological distress scores and prevalence of lifetime suicidal ideation and suicide plan would have been reduced by 25.7% (women 20.8%, men 36.9%), 10.2% (women 11.2%, men 11.9%) and 5.8% (women 7.8%, men 8.1%), respectively.
Socioeconomic factors account for a considerable proportion of the variation in mental health outcomes between non-Indigenous and Indigenous populations in Canada. Improving socioeconomic status among Indigenous people through plans like income equalization may reduce the gap in mental health outcomes between the 2 populations in Canada.
在加拿大,原住民受到心理健康问题的影响不成比例。我们调查了居住在加拿大保留地以外的非原住民和原住民群体之间心理困扰和自杀行为差异的潜在因素。
我们使用 2012 年加拿大社区健康调查-心理健康的数据进行了一项横断面研究。受访者年龄在 18 岁及以上。我们衡量了原住民和非原住民群体之间心理困扰(10 项 Kessler 心理困扰量表评分,范围从 10(无困扰)到 50(严重困扰))和终生自杀意念和自杀计划的流行率,并使用 Blinder-Oaxaca 方法解释了这些差异。
该调查的总体回复率为 68.9%,包括 18300 名受访者(933 名原住民和 17367 名非原住民成年人)。我们发现非原住民的平均心理困扰评分低于原住民(15.1 对 16.1,<0.001),终生自杀意念的流行率也较低(9.2%对 16.8%,<0.001)和计划(2.3%对 6.8%,<0.001)。我们发现,如果原住民的社会经济地位与非原住民人口相似,那么在平均心理困扰评分和终生自杀意念和自杀计划的流行率方面的差异将减少 25.7%(女性 20.8%,男性 36.9%),10.2%(女性 11.2%,男性 11.9%)和 5.8%(女性 7.8%,男性 8.1%)。
社会经济因素在加拿大非原住民和原住民群体之间的心理健康结果差异中占相当大的比例。通过收入均等化等计划改善原住民的社会经济地位,可能会缩小加拿大这两个群体之间的心理健康结果差距。