Publication:
Factors Associated with Suicide Attempts and Suicides in the General Population of Andalusia (Spain).

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2019-11-14

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Mejías-Martín, Yolanda
Luna Del Castillo, Juan de Dios
Rodríguez-Mejías, Candela
Martí-García, Celia
Valencia-Quintero, Juan Pablo
García-Caro, María Paz

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Abstract

Discrepant results have been published by studies comparing deaths by suicide with attempted suicides. This study aimed to determine factors associated with suicides and attempted suicides in Andalusia (Spain) between 2007 and 2013, comparing sex, age, year, and suicide method between these populations. A retrospective study was conducted of data on deaths by suicide and attempted suicides over a seven-year period, calculating the sex and age rates for each behavior. Adjusted Poisson regression was used to analyze the association with study variables, and incidence rate ratios were estimated. During the seven-year study period, 20,254 attempted suicides and 5202 deaths by suicide were recorded. The prevalence of attempted suicide did not differ between the sexes, whereas the prevalence of deaths by suicide was three-fold higher among males than among females and increased with higher age. The most frequently used method was the same in males and females for suicide attempts, but differed between the sexes for suicides. The combined influence of sex and age was greater in the model for death by suicide than in the model for attempted suicide. The key differentiating factor was the method used, while the finding of greatest concern was the suicide behavior among the elderly. Preventive strategies should take these differences into account.

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Adolescent
Adult
Aged
Aged, 80 and over
Female
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Retrospective Studies
Spain
Suicide, Attempted
Suicide, Completed
Young Adult

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Keywords

emergency medical services, population groups, suicide, suicide attempt

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