Taniguchi Yuta, Tamiya Nanako, Iwagami Masao, Yamagishi Kazumasa, Miyawaki Atsushi, Masuda Rie, Kihara Tomomi, Komiyama Jun, Tachikawa Hirokazu, Takahashi Hideto, Iso Hiroyasu
Department of Health Services Research, Graduate School of Comprehensive Human Sciences, University of Tsukuba, 1-1-1 Tenno-dai, Tsukuba, Ibaraki, 305-8575, Japan.
Institute for Global Health Policy Research, Bureau of International Health Cooperation, National Center for Global Health and Medicine, 1-21-1 Toyama, Shinjuku-ku, Tokyo, 162-8655, Japan.
Int J Equity Health. 2024 Jul 31;23(1):150. doi: 10.1186/s12939-024-02234-z.
Suicide rates in Japan have increased during the COVID-19 pandemic, and foreign residents may be more vulnerable to mental stress during such crises. Therefore, we aimed to compare the trends in suicide rates during the COVID-19 pandemic between foreign residents and Japanese citizens.
Vital statistics of Japan data from January 1, 2016 to December 31, 2021 were used to calculate quarterly sex-specific suicide rates for foreign residents and Japanese citizens. An event-study analysis was conducted to evaluate whether suicide rates during the COVID-19 pandemic increased compared to pre-pandemic estimates; foreign residents and Japanese citizens were compared using difference-in-difference-in-differences estimates.
Between 2016 and 2021, 1,431 foreign residents and 121,610 Japanese citizens died from suicide in Japan. Although the suicide rate for foreign residents was lower than that for Japanese citizens, Korean residents, who comprise approximately half of the foreign decedents, had largely higher suicide rates than Japanese citizens. The event-study analysis indicated that suicide rates increased among foreign residents for both men and women, and continued for men by the end of 2021. In Japanese citizens, after a decline in suicide rates in the second quarter of 2020, suicide rates increased both among men and women, and lasted for women until the fourth quarter of 2021. The difference-in-difference-in-differences analyses confirmed the initial decline in the second quarter of 2020 in suicide rate only in Japanese men and women, and the persistent increase through 2021 in foreign men.
We found differential trends in suicide rates between foreign and Japanese men and women during the COVID-19 pandemic featuring a persistent increase in foreign men. Suicide prevention measures should be focused on these high-risk subpopulations.
在新冠疫情期间,日本的自杀率有所上升,外国居民在这类危机中可能更容易受到精神压力的影响。因此,我们旨在比较新冠疫情期间外国居民和日本公民的自杀率趋势。
使用日本2016年1月1日至2021年12月31日的人口动态统计数据,计算外国居民和日本公民按性别划分的季度自杀率。进行了一项事件研究分析,以评估新冠疫情期间的自杀率与疫情前的估计相比是否有所上升;使用三重差分估计对外国居民和日本公民进行比较。
2016年至2021年期间,日本有1431名外国居民和121610名日本公民自杀身亡。虽然外国居民的自杀率低于日本公民,但占外国死者约一半的韩国居民的自杀率大多高于日本公民。事件研究分析表明,外国居民中男性和女性的自杀率均有所上升,并且男性一直持续到2021年底。在日本公民中,2020年第二季度自杀率下降后,男性和女性的自杀率均有所上升,女性一直持续到2021年第四季度。三重差分分析证实,仅在2020年第二季度日本男性和女性的自杀率出现了最初的下降,而外国男性的自杀率在2021年持续上升。
我们发现在新冠疫情期间,外国和日本男性及女性的自杀率呈现出不同的趋势,其特点是外国男性的自杀率持续上升。自杀预防措施应集中在这些高危亚人群体上。