Author/Authors :
G. Andrew Page، نويسنده , , Stephen Morrell، نويسنده , , Richard Taylor، نويسنده , , Greg Carter، نويسنده , , Michael Dudley Delano Clarke، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Objectives This study investigated secular
trends in socio-economic status (SES) differentials
in Australian suicide (1979–2003), which includes
overall declines in male suicide from 1998. Method
Suicide rates were stratified by approximate equalpopulation
quintiles of area-based SES for the period
1979–2003 and examined across five quinquennia,
centred on each Australian Census from 1981 to 2001,
to determine if (1) SES differentials in suicide have
persisted over time, and (2) if SES differentials have
widened or narrowed. Suicide rates (per 100,000) were
adjusted for confounding by sex, age, country-of-birth,
and urban–rural residence using Poisson regression
models, and secular changes in SES differentials were
assessed using trend tests on suicide rate ratios (low to
high SES quintiles). Results Socio-economic status
(SES) differentials persisted across the study period for
both males and females after adjusting for the effects of
age, migrant status, and urban–rural residence, with
the largest differences between low and high SES
groups evident in males, and especially young males
(20–34 years). For males, suicide rates increased significantly
in all SES groups until 1998, before diverging
significantly in the most recent 5-year period, particularly
in younger males (P < 0.0001). In young males,
suicide rates in the most recent period increased in the
low SES group from 44.8 in 1994–1998 to 48.6 in 1999–
2003 (an 8% increase). In contrast, suicide rates in the
middle SES group decreased from a peak of 37.3 to 33.5
(a 10%decrease), and in the high SES group from a peak
of 33.0 to 27.9 (a 15% decrease). A similar statistically
significant divergence of a lesser magnitude was also
evident in all age males and younger females (20–
34 years). Conclusion This study shows that SES differentials
in suicide persisted in Australia for most of
the period 1979–2004. The decline in suicide in young
males in the most recent quinquennium was limited to
middle and high SES groups, while the low SES group
displayed a continued increase. The continued increase
in suicide in low SES males has implications for social
and economic intervention and suicide control programs.