Author:
BEAUTRAIS A. L.,JOYCE P. R.,MULDER R. T.
Abstract
Background. This study used a case–control design
to examine the association between
unemployment and risk of medically serious suicide attempt.Method. A sample of 302 individuals who made serious suicide
attempts was contrasted with 1028
randomly selected community control subjects.Results. Individuals who made serious suicide attempts
reported higher rates of current
unemployment (OR=4·2) than control subjects. This association
was similar for males and
females. However, even before adjustment for confounding factors it
was evident that exposure to
unemployment made only a small contribution to suicide attempt risk.
The population attributable
risk for exposure to unemployment was 7·3%. After adjustment
for antecedent childhood, family
and educational factors the association between unemployment and
risk of serious suicide attempt
was reduced but remained significant (OR=2·1), suggesting that
common antecedent factors made
a large contribution to risks of both unemployment and serious
suicide attempt. When both
antecedent family and childhood factors, and psychiatric morbidity
were taken into account,
unemployment was not significantly related to risks of serious
suicide attempt.Conclusion. The results of this study provide support for
the contention that much of the association
between unemployment and suicidal behaviour is non-causal, and
reflects common or correlated
factors that contribute to risks of both unemployment and suicidal
behaviour. Any remaining
association between unemployment and suicide attempt risk appears to
arise from the correlation
that exists between unemployment and psychiatric disorder.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Applied Psychology
Cited by
92 articles.
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