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Journal Article

Citation

DeBastiani SD, Norris AE, Kerr A. Neurol. Psychiatry Brain Res. 2019; 33: 56-64.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, Springer International)

DOI

10.1016/j.npbr.2019.06.004

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Socioeconomic factors have been linked to suicide, but little research has explored the effects of these determinants on suicide risk in US populations. This population-based study assessed socioeconomic determinants of suicide risk to inform suicide assessment and intervention.

METHOD: Secondary analysis of the Monroe County Florida 2016 Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance Survey suicide behavior questions among adult residents (n = 528). Univariate analysis and logistic regression assessed associations of self-reported socioeconomic status (education, employment, income, housing), health care access, quality of life, substance use, mental illness and suicide risk. Result(s): Among respondents, 7.34% (n = 49, CI = 4.27-10.41) were at risk for suicide. Persons at risk reported more depression (χ2 [1, n = 417] = 105.5, p =.001), poorer mental health (χ2 [2, n = 411] = 36.6, p =.001), and more activity limitation due to health (χ2 [1, n = 408] = 34.3, p =.001) than those not at risk. Persons at risk were more likely to be renting homes (63.5%, n = 19, CI = 43.53-80.52) than persons not at risk (36.9%, n = 86, CI = 28.53-43.29). Limitations: 32% missing data supports replication of study findings using larger data sets. Maximum likelihood estimation handled missing data in regression analyses. Low prevalence of suicide risk required collapsing some conceptually different categories.

CONCLUSION(s): Housing was a stronger socioeconomic predictor of suicide risk than income, employment, or education. This finding supports exploring housing status in suicide assessment and research. © 2019 Elsevier GmbH


Language: en

Keywords

adult; Florida; human; suicide; Suicide; female; male; quality of life; binge drinking; Socioeconomic status; depression; sex difference; Suicide risk; education; substance use; Suicide prevention; suicidal behavior; unemployment; housing; Population health; major clinical study; mental disease; socioeconomics; priority journal; health care access; employment; social status; race difference; social class; income; Article; secondary analysis; Rural health; social determinants of health

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