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Journal Article

Citation

Lin PH, Liao SC, Chen IM, Kuo PH, Shan JC, Lee MB, Chen WJ. Psychooncology 2017; 26(11): 1852-1859.

Affiliation

Institute of Epidemiology and Preventive Medicine, College of Public Health, National Taiwan University, Taipei, Taiwan.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2017, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1002/pon.4396

PMID

28181332

Abstract

BACKGROUND: National Health Insurance (NHI), launched in 1995 in Taiwan, lightens patient's financial burdens but its effect on the suicide risk in cancer patients is unclear. We aimed to investigate the impacts of the NHI on the suicide in newly diagnosed cancer patients.

METHODS: We identified patients with newly diagnosed cancer from the nationwide Taiwan Cancer Registration from 1985 to 2007, and ascertained suicide deaths from the national database of registered deaths between 1985 and 2009. Standardized mortality ratio (SMR) of suicide risk among patients with cancer was calculated, and the suicide risk ratios were examined by gender, age group, and prognosis.

RESULTS: For the 916,337 registered cancer patients with 4,300,953 person-years, 2,543 died by suicide, with a suicide rate of 59.1 per 100,000 person-years. Compared to the general population, cancer patients had a SMR of 2.47 for suicide, with a higher figure for males (2.73), age 45 to 64 (2.89), and cancer of poor prognosis (3.19). The suicide risk was highest in the first two years after the initial diagnosis. Comparing the cohorts of the period before (1985 to 1992) and after (1996 to 2007) the launch of NHI, we saw a reduction in the SMR within the first two years after cancer diagnosis (20%), with more prominent reduction for females (29%), age under 45 (69%), and cancer of good prognosis (33%).

CONCLUSIONS: A universal health coverage relieving both physical and psychological distress may account for the post-NHI reduction of immediate suicide risk in patients of newly diagnosed cancer.

This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.


Language: en

Keywords

cancer; financial hardship; oncology; standardized mortality ratio; suicide; universal health coverage

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