Author:
Reeves Aaron,McKee Martin,Stuckler David
Abstract
SummaryThere has been a substantial rise in ‘economic suicides' in the Great
Recessions afflicting Europe and North America. We estimate that the Great
Recession is associated with at least 10 000 additional economic suicides
between 2008 and 2010. A critical question for policy and psychiatric
practice is whether these suicide rises are inevitable. Marked
cross-national variations in suicides in the recession offer one clue that
they are potentially avoidable. Job loss, debt and foreclosure increase
risks of suicidal thinking. A range of interventions, from upstream
return-to-work programmes through to antidepressant prescriptions may help
mitigate suicide risk during economic downturn.
Publisher
Royal College of Psychiatrists
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health
Cited by
193 articles.
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