Canadian Institute for Health Information, 4110 Yonge St Suite 300, North York, ON M2P 2B7, Canada.
Ontario Shores Centre for Mental Health Sciences, 700 Gordon St, Whitby, Ontario, L1N 5S9, Canada.
Soc Sci Med. 2023 May;325:115896. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2023.115896. Epub 2023 Apr 7.
While self-reported data shows that lesbian, gay, and bisexual (LBG) individuals have a greater suicide-related behaviours (SRB) risk, little is known about how rurality may amplify SRB risk associated with sexual minority status. Sexual minority individuals in rural areas may experience unique stressors due to stigma and a lack of LGB-specific social and mental health services. Using a population-representative sample linked to clinical SRB outcomes, we examined whether rurality modifies the association between sexual minority status and SRB risk.
A nationally representative survey linked to administrative health data was used to construct a cohort of individuals (unweighted n = 169,091; weighted n = 8,778,115) in Ontario, Canada, and captured all SRB-related emergency department visits, hospitalizations, and deaths between 2007 and 2017. Sex-stratified discrete-time survival analyses were used to examine interactions between rurality and sexual minority status on SRB risk while controlling for potential confounders.
Sexual minority men had 2.18 times higher SRB odds compared to their heterosexual counterparts (95%CI 1.21-3.91), while sexual minority women had 2.07 times higher odds (95%CI 1.48-2.89) after adjusting for the confounders. The Rurality Index of Ontario and the Index of Remoteness were associated with the odds of SRB in a dose-response manner. No significant interactions were observed between rural and sexual minority status.
Our study provides evidence that rural and sexual minority status both independently contribute to an elevated likelihood of SRB; however, rurality did not appear to modify SRB risk by sexual orientation. Implementation and evaluation of interventions to reduce SRB in both rural and sexual minority populations are required.
尽管自我报告的数据显示,同性恋、双性恋和跨性别(LGBT)个体自杀相关行为(SRB)的风险更高,但人们对农村地区的情况知之甚少,不知道农村环境会如何放大与性少数群体身份相关的 SRB 风险。由于污名化和缺乏针对 LGBT 群体的社会和心理健康服务,农村地区的性少数群体可能会面临独特的压力源。本研究使用与临床 SRB 结果相关的代表性人群样本,研究了农村环境是否会改变性少数群体身份与 SRB 风险之间的关联。
使用全国代表性调查与行政健康数据相联系,构建了加拿大安大略省的队列人群(未加权 n=169091;加权 n=8778115),并在 2007 年至 2017 年期间捕获了所有与 SRB 相关的急诊就诊、住院和死亡情况。性别分层离散时间生存分析用于检验农村环境与性少数群体身份对 SRB 风险的交互作用,同时控制潜在混杂因素。
调整混杂因素后,性少数男性的 SRB 风险是异性恋男性的 2.18 倍(95%CI 1.21-3.91),性少数女性的 SRB 风险是异性恋女性的 2.07 倍(95%CI 1.48-2.89)。安大略省农村指数和偏远指数与 SRB 概率呈剂量反应关系。未观察到农村和性少数群体身份之间存在显著的相互作用。
本研究提供了证据表明,农村环境和性少数群体身份都独立地增加了 SRB 的可能性;然而,农村环境似乎并没有通过性取向来改变 SRB 风险。需要在农村和性少数群体中实施和评估减少 SRB 的干预措施。