Introduction Suicide rates in the United States have risen nearly 30% since 1999, and mental health conditions are one of several factors contributing to suicide. Examining state-level trends in suicide and the multiple circumstances contributing to it can inform comprehensive state suicide prevention planning. Methods Trends in age-adjusted suicide rates among persons aged ≥10 years, by state and sex, across six consecutive 3-year periods (1999–2016), were assessed using data from the National Vital Statistics System for 50 states and the District of Columbia. Data from the National Violent Death Reporting System, covering 27 states in 2015, were used to examine contributing circumstances among decedents with and without known mental health conditions. Results During 1999–2016, suicide rates increased significantly in 44 states, with 25 states experiencing increases >30%. Rates increased significantly among males and females in 34 and 43 states, respectively. Fifty-four percent of decedents in 27 states in 2015 did not have a known mental health condition. Among decedents with available information, several circumstances were significantly more likely among those without known mental health conditions than among those with mental health conditions, including relationship problems/loss (45.1% versus 39.6%), life stressors (50.5% versus 47.2%), and recent/impending crises (32.9% versus 26.0%), but these circumstances were common across groups. Conclusions Suicide rates increased significantly across most states during 1999–2016. Various circumstances contributed to suicides among persons with and without known mental health conditions. Implications for Public Health Practice States can use a comprehensive evidence-based public health approach to prevent suicide risk before it occurs, identify and support persons at risk, prevent reattempts, and help friends and family members in the aftermath of a suicide.
Vital Signs: Trends in State Suicide Rates — United States, 1999–2016 and Circumstances Contributing to Suicide — 27 States, 2015
Deborah M. Stone,T. Simon,Katherine A. Fowler,S. Kegler,K. Yuan,Kristin M. Holland,A. Ivey-Stephenson,A. Crosby
Published 2018 in MMWR. Morbidity and mortality weekly report
ABSTRACT
PUBLICATION RECORD
- Publication year
2018
- Venue
MMWR. Morbidity and mortality weekly report
- Publication date
2018-06-08
- Fields of study
Medicine, Psychology
- Identifiers
- External record
- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar, PubMed
CITATION MAP
EXTRACTION MAP
CLAIMS
CONCEPTS
- age-adjusted suicide rate
A suicide mortality measure adjusted for age distribution to allow comparisons across states and time periods.
Aliases: age-adjusted suicide rates
- contributing circumstance
A factor or event associated with a suicide death that was coded from death-reporting information.
Aliases: circumstances contributing to suicide, circumstances
- life stressors
Non-relationship stressors in a decedent's life recorded as a contributing circumstance.
Aliases: stressors
- mental health condition
A known mental health diagnosis or condition recorded for a suicide decedent in the reporting data.
Aliases: mental health conditions
- national violent death reporting system
A multi-state surveillance system used here to examine circumstances associated with suicide deaths.
Aliases: NVDRS
- national vital statistics system
The U.S. mortality data system used here to obtain suicide death records for state and sex trend analyses.
Aliases: NVSS
- recent/impending crises
An acute or soon-to-occur crisis documented as a contributing circumstance.
Aliases: recent crises, impending crises
- relationship problems/loss
Problems with or loss of a personal relationship recorded as a contributing circumstance.
Aliases: relationship problems
- sex-specific trends
Differences in suicide-rate changes analyzed separately for males and females.
Aliases: by sex, male and female trends
- state-level suicide trends
Patterns of suicide rates analyzed across U.S. states over multiple time periods.
Aliases: state suicide rates, state trends
REFERENCES
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