Behavioral Health (Miller-Matero, Maffett, Mooney, Frank, Ahmedani) and Center for Health Policy and Health Services Research (Miller-Matero, Yeh, Sala-Hamrick, Ahmedani), Henry Ford Health, Detroit; Kaiser Permanente Washington Health Research Institute, Seattle (Simon); HealthPartners Institute, Minneapolis (Rossom); Department of Health Policy and Behavioral Sciences, School of Public Health, Georgia State University, and Center for Research and Evaluation, Kaiser Permanente Georgia, Atlanta (Owen-Smith); Center for Health Research, Kaiser Permanente Northwest, Portland, Oregon (Lynch); Institute for Health Research, Kaiser Permanente Colorado, Aurora (Beck); Essentia Institute of Rural Health, Duluth, Minnesota (Waring); Center for Integrated Health Care Research, Kaiser Permanente Hawaii, Honolulu (Daida); Department of Population Medicine, Harvard Medical School, and Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Institute, Boston (Lu).
Psychiatr Serv. 2024 Feb 1;75(2):124-130. doi: 10.1176/appi.ps.20220578. Epub 2023 Aug 9.
Suicide remains an urgent public health crisis. Although some sociodemographic characteristics are associated with greater suicide risk in the general population, it is unclear whether individuals utilizing health care in the United States have similar suicide incidence patterns. The authors examined whether race-ethnicity is associated with suicide death among patients seeking health care and investigated health care utilization patterns.
Data were collected from electronic health records and government mortality records for patients seeking health care across nine health care systems in the United States. Patients who died by suicide (N=1,935) were matched with patients in a control group (N=19,350) within each health care system.
Patients who died by suicide were significantly more likely to be White, older, male, living in low-education areas, living in rural areas, or diagnosed as having mental health conditions or were significantly less likely to have commercial insurance (p<0.05). Among most racial-ethnic groups, those who died by suicide had a higher number of past-year mental health, primary care, and total health care visits; for American Indian/Alaska Native patients, the number of health care visits tended to be lower among suicide decedents.
These findings suggest that higher past-year health care utilization was associated with increased likelihood of suicide death across several racial-ethnic groups. This observation underscores the need for identifying and managing suicide risk in health care settings, including outside of mental health visits, among most racial-ethnic groups.
自杀仍是一个紧迫的公共卫生危机。尽管一些社会人口学特征与一般人群中更高的自杀风险相关,但尚不清楚在美国利用医疗保健的人群是否具有相似的自杀发生率模式。作者研究了在美国寻求医疗保健的人群中,种族和民族是否与自杀死亡相关,并调查了医疗保健利用模式。
从美国九个医疗保健系统的电子健康记录和政府死亡记录中收集数据。在每个医疗保健系统中,将自杀死亡的患者(N=1935)与对照组患者(N=19350)相匹配。
自杀死亡的患者更有可能是白人、年龄较大、男性、居住在低教育水平地区、居住在农村地区,或被诊断为患有心理健康状况,或更不可能拥有商业保险(p<0.05)。在大多数种族群体中,自杀死亡的患者过去一年的心理健康、初级保健和总医疗保健就诊次数更多;对于美国印第安人/阿拉斯加原住民患者,自杀死亡者的就诊次数往往较低。
这些发现表明,过去一年中更高的医疗保健利用率与多个种族群体的自杀死亡风险增加相关。这一观察结果强调了在医疗保健环境中识别和管理自杀风险的必要性,包括心理健康就诊以外的其他就诊,尤其是在大多数种族群体中。