Choi Namkee G, Choi Bryan Y, Marti C Nathan
Steve Hicks School of Social Work, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas, USA.
Department of Emergency Medicine, Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.
Innov Aging. 2023 Jul 6;7(6):igad073. doi: 10.1093/geroni/igad073. eCollection 2023.
Physical health problems are a significant late-life suicide precipitant. This study's purpose was to examine differences in (i) other suicide precipitants and psychiatric/substance use problems, and (ii) suicide methods (firearms, hanging/suffocation, and poisoning) in 3 age groups (55-64, 65-74, and 75+) of older suicide decedents who had physical health problems as a suicide precipitant.
Data came from the 2017-2019 U.S. National Violent Death Reporting System ( = 34,912; 27,761 males [79.5%] and 7,151 females [20.5%]). Generalized linear models for a Poisson distribution with a log link were used to examine the study questions.
Physical health problems were a suicide precipitant for 25.8%, 41.9%, and 57.7% of the 55-64, 65-74, and 75+ age groups, respectively, and were associated with a higher likelihood of having had depressed mood (IRR = 1.38, 95% CI: 1.33-1.43) and other substance use problems (IRR = 1.22, 95% CI: 1.13-1.31). Interaction effects showed that when job/finance/housing problems, depressed mood, or any psychiatric disorders were co-present with physical health problems, the age group differences in the predicted rates of physical health problems were diminished. Physical health problems were also positively associated with firearm and poisoning use, but negatively associated with hanging/suffocation. Interaction effects indicated that the predicted rates of firearm and poisoning use significantly increased among those aged 55-64 with than without physical health problems.
In all 3 age groups of older suicide decedents, physical health problems were the predominant suicide precipitant, and those with physical health problems had elevated depressed mood. Assessment of suicide risk, affordable and accessible health, and mental health services, restriction of access to lethal suicide methods, and policy-based suicide prevention approaches for older adults with physical health problems are needed.
身体健康问题是导致晚年自杀的一个重要因素。本研究旨在探讨以下两方面的差异:(i)其他自杀诱因以及精神疾病/物质使用问题;(ii)在以身体健康问题作为自杀诱因的老年自杀死亡者的三个年龄组(55 - 64岁、65 - 74岁和75岁及以上)中自杀方式(枪支、上吊/窒息和中毒)的差异。
数据来自2017 - 2019年美国国家暴力死亡报告系统(n = 34,912;男性27,761人[79.5%],女性7,151人[20.5%])。使用带有对数链接的泊松分布广义线性模型来研究这些问题。
在55 - 64岁、65 - 74岁和75岁及以上年龄组中,身体健康问题分别是25.8%、41.9%和57.7%的自杀死亡者的自杀诱因,并且与情绪低落(发病率比值比[IRR] = 1.38,95%置信区间[CI]:1.33 - 1.43)和其他物质使用问题(IRR = 1.22,95% CI:1.13 - 1.31)的较高可能性相关。交互效应表明,当工作/财务/住房问题、情绪低落或任何精神疾病与身体健康问题同时出现时,身体健康问题预测发生率的年龄组差异会减小。身体健康问题也与枪支和中毒使用呈正相关,但与上吊/窒息呈负相关。交互效应表明,在55 - 64岁有身体健康问题的人群中,枪支和中毒使用的预测发生率相比没有身体健康问题的人群显著增加。
在老年自杀死亡者的所有三个年龄组中,身体健康问题都是主要的自杀诱因,并且有身体健康问题的人情绪低落程度更高。需要对自杀风险、可负担且可及的健康和心理健康服务进行评估,限制获取致命自杀方式的途径,并针对有身体健康问题的老年人采取基于政策的自杀预防方法。