Shirzad Mahboubeh, Yenokyan Gayane, Marcell Arik V, Kaufman Michelle R
Department of Health, Behavior & Society, Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins University Baltimore, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Biostatistics Center, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Public Health. 2024 Nov;236:35-42. doi: 10.1016/j.puhe.2024.07.015. Epub 2024 Aug 17.
The aim of this study was to explore sex-specific disparities in rates of deaths of despair across 183 countries from 2000 to 2019.
Secondary analysis of cross-sectional population-level data.
Data were obtained from the World Health Organization Health Inequality Data Repository. We analysed data on mortality due to alcohol, drug-use disorders, and self-harm (as a proxy for suicide). We calculated the average rate of deaths of despair by year and sex, trends in these rates, and cause-specific mortality trends. We then fitted mixed-effect generalised linear models to compare mortality rates by sex and country.
Analyses revealed significant disparities by sex, with a 3.3-fold higher rate among men than among women globally (95% confidence interval: 3.1-3.5, P < 0.001). There was a significant decline in deaths of despair globally and among both sexes during the assessed period (5% per 5 years). Lesotho, Belarus, the US, the Russian Federation, Guyana, and Slovenia ranked among the top 10 countries out of 183 with the highest mortality rates for both sexes. Canada, the Republic of Korea, Belgium, and Finland were countries with the highest mortality rates among women, whereas Ukraine, Lithuania, Mongolia, and Eswatini have the highest rates among men. In the US, 5-year mortality rates increased by 35% for women and 21% for men: drug-use mortality showed a significant increase over time, whereas suicide rates decreased for both sexes in the given country. Additionally, mortality rates from alcohol use decreased among women.
This global analysis shed light on health disparities by sex in deaths of despair, especially concerning trends in the US. It identified countries and groups in need of targeted mental health and substance-use programs. Moreover, the disparities by sex revealed in this analysis suggest that mental health and substance-use interventions and programs may need to be more attentive to sex and/or gender, such as inequitable social norms and restrictive forms of masculinities, which have been shown to be contributing factors to deaths of despair.
本研究旨在探讨2000年至2019年期间183个国家绝望死亡发生率的性别差异。
对横断面人群水平数据进行二次分析。
数据来自世界卫生组织健康不平等数据存储库。我们分析了酒精、药物使用障碍和自残(作为自杀的替代指标)导致的死亡率数据。我们计算了按年份和性别划分的绝望死亡平均发生率、这些发生率的趋势以及特定原因的死亡率趋势。然后,我们拟合了混合效应广义线性模型,以比较不同性别和国家的死亡率。
分析显示存在显著的性别差异,全球男性的发生率比女性高3.3倍(95%置信区间:3.1 - 3.5,P < 0.001)。在评估期间,全球以及男女两性的绝望死亡人数均显著下降(每5年下降5%)。莱索托、白俄罗斯、美国、俄罗斯联邦、圭亚那和斯洛文尼亚在183个国家中,男女死亡率均位列前十。加拿大、韩国、比利时和芬兰是女性死亡率最高的国家,而乌克兰、立陶宛、蒙古和斯威士兰是男性死亡率最高的国家。在美国,女性的5年死亡率上升了35%,男性上升了21%:药物使用死亡率随时间显著上升,而该国男女自杀率均下降。此外,女性酒精使用死亡率下降。
这项全球分析揭示了绝望死亡方面的性别健康差异,尤其是美国的趋势。它确定了需要针对性心理健康和物质使用项目的国家和群体。此外,本分析中揭示的性别差异表明,心理健康和物质使用干预及项目可能需要更加关注性别因素,例如不公平的社会规范和男性气质的限制形式,这些已被证明是绝望死亡的促成因素。