Abstract
Background. Various studies from Australia, Canada and the
United States have shown significant
rank correlations between the suicide rates of immigrants and those of
their country of birth (COB).
This study compares the rank ordering of age standardized suicide
rates of immigrants in Australia
for two periods, 1961–70 and 1979–90: (a) between
each period; and (b) with their COB for each period.Methods. Data were obtained from the World Health Organization
Annual Statistics and from the
Australian Bureau of Statistics. Comparisons were made for 11 countries
from England and Wales,
Ireland and Europe, for which there was a sufficiently large number
of immigrant suicides to warrant statistical analysis.Results. The data showed considerable heterogeneity in rates
of immigrants from various countries,
with increased rates in Australia compared with their COB. There were
consistently significant
Spearman rank correlations between the rates after immigration and
those in their COB for each
period, and between rates in the two periods for both immigrants and
for their COB, despite
increases in suicide rates, and considerable socio-economic demographic
changes between the various countries over that time span.Conclusions. The findings are used to argue two conclusions:
(i) the important influence of pre-migrant social and
cultural experiences in subsequent suicide rates in immigrants in their
host
country; and (ii) to support the case for the reliability of
using international suicide data for comparative epidemiological research.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Applied Psychology
Cited by
77 articles.
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