Sutton Olivia P, Kious Brent M
Evans School of Public Policy & Governance, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, USA.
Department of Psychiatry, Huntsman Mental Health Institute, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah, USA.
AJOB Empir Bioeth. 2025 Apr-Jun;16(2):85-93. doi: 10.1080/23294515.2024.2433474. Epub 2024 Dec 9.
Some have hypothesized that changing attitudes toward medical aid in dying (MAID) contribute to increased suicide rates, perhaps by increasing interest in dying or the perceived acceptability of suicide. This would represent a strong criticism of MAID policies. We sought to evaluate the association between the legalization and implementation of MAID across the U.S. and changing suicide rates.
We evaluated state-level monthly suicide death rates from 1995 to 2021. Because suicide rates vary by state, we constructed geographically-weighted regression models controlling for annualized state-level sociodemographic factors, such as racial distribution (percent Caucasian), average age, income levels, unemployment rates, rates of spiritual engagement, firearm ownership rates, gender ratios, and education levels. We applied a difference-in-difference analysis within our geographically-weighted models.
927,929 Suicide deaths were represented in the study. Ten states and the District of Columbia had legalized MAID within the study period. In an univariable analysis, states that legalized MAID differed significantly from non-MAID states with respect to mean monthly suicide rate (non-MAID States: 1.46; MAID states: 1.78; < 0.0001), as well as several covariates. Monthly suicide death rates were spatially autocorrelated (Moran's = 0.607, < 0.0001). In separate geographically-weighted difference-in-difference analyses, changes in suicide rates were not significantly associated with MAID legalization ( = 0.042, = 0.33) or with later MAID implementation ( = 0.030, = 0.63), with differences in suicide rates in MAID and non-MAID states being attributable to baseline between-state differences.
Our study failed to find evidence that suicide rates were positively associated with MAID legalization or MAID implementation, when controlling for geographic variation and multiple sociodemographic factors associated with suicide risk. This finding contrasts with other studies that have reported a positive association between suicide rates and MAID, and so calls into question one argument against MAID legalization.
一些人推测,对医疗协助死亡(MAID)态度的转变可能导致自杀率上升,也许是通过增加对死亡的兴趣或对自杀的可接受性认知。这将是对MAID政策的强烈批评。我们试图评估美国MAID的合法化与实施情况和自杀率变化之间的关联。
我们评估了1995年至2021年各州每月的自杀死亡率。由于自杀率因州而异,我们构建了地理加权回归模型,控制年度化的州级社会人口因素,如种族分布(白人百分比)、平均年龄、收入水平、失业率、精神参与率、枪支拥有率、性别比例和教育水平。我们在地理加权模型中应用了双重差分分析。
该研究涵盖了927,929例自杀死亡案例。在研究期间,有10个州和哥伦比亚特区使MAID合法化。在单变量分析中,使MAID合法化的州与未合法化的州在平均每月自杀率方面存在显著差异(未合法化州:1.46;合法化州:1.78;<0.0001),在其他几个协变量方面也有差异。每月自杀死亡率存在空间自相关性(莫兰指数=0.607,<0.0001)。在单独的地理加权双重差分分析中,自杀率的变化与MAID合法化(=0.042,=0.33)或MAID的后期实施(=0.030,=0.63)均无显著关联,MAID州和非MAID州自杀率的差异可归因于州与州之间的基线差异。
我们的研究未能找到证据表明,在控制地理差异和与自杀风险相关的多个社会人口因素时,自杀率与MAID合法化或MAID实施呈正相关。这一发现与其他报告自杀率与MAID呈正相关的研究形成对比,因此对反对MAID合法化的一个论点提出了质疑。