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Journal Article

Citation

Pollock NJ, Apok C, Concepcion T, Delgado RA, Rasmus S, Chatwood S, Collins PY. Indian J. Psychiatry 2020; 62(1): 7-14.

Affiliation

Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2020, Medknow Publications)

DOI

10.4103/psychiatry.IndianJPsychiatry_717_19

PMID

32001925

PMCID

PMC6964448

Abstract

The purpose of this selective narrative review is to provide an overview of suicide and suicide prevention in the Circumpolar North and the relevance of global strategies and policies to these themes. We conducted a selective review of the English language literature on Arctic Indigenous mental health, suicide, and suicide prevention. We briefly present the social context, epidemiology, and risk and protective factors for suicide in the Arctic, with a focus on Indigenous peoples. We highlight a recent collaborative, intergovernmental response to elevated suicide rates in this region, the Reducing the Incidence of Suicide in Indigenous Groups - Strengths United through Networks Initiative, which used a consensus methodology to identify key outcomes for evaluating suicide prevention interventions in the circumpolar context. In relation to the Sustainable Development Goals, we examine recent policy developments in Indigenous-led suicide prevention and identify opportunities for strengthening policy, community interventions, and research. Globally, suicide prevention is a public health priority, and reducing the number of suicide deaths is a key target for sustainable development. Although overall and country-specific suicide rates have decreased since 1990, there remains wide variation at the regional and local level. This is particularly evident in the Arctic region known as the Circumpolar North, where Indigenous peoples experience marked disparities in suicide risk and suicide deaths compared to non-Indigenous populations. The factors that influence these variations are complex and often rooted in the social and economic consequences of colonization. The integration of science, community-based and Indigenous knowledge, and policies that address upstream risks for suicide will play an important role in suicide prevention alongside the growing number of Indigenous suicide prevention strategies tailored for specific populations.

Copyright: © 2020 Indian Journal of Psychiatry.


Language: en

Keywords

Arctic; Indigenous; circumpolar health; global health; suicide prevention

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