| Literature DB >> 15527502 |
Geneviève Arsenault-Lapierre1, Caroline Kim, Gustavo Turecki.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: It is well known that most suicide cases meet criteria for a psychiatric disorder. However, rates of specific disorders vary considerably between studies and little information is known about gender and geographic differences. This study provides overall rates of total and specific psychiatric disorders in suicide completers and presents evidence supporting gender and geographic differences in their relative proportion.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2004 PMID: 15527502 PMCID: PMC534107 DOI: 10.1186/1471-244X-4-37
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Psychiatry ISSN: 1471-244X Impact factor: 3.630
Description of the 27 studies included in this meta-analysis
| Study | Year | Origin | Diagnostic criteria | Methods | Number of diagnoses | n Suicide | With a Dx (%) | n Control | with a Dx (%) | Matched |
| Appleby et al.[151]* | 1999 | England | ICD-10 | Official records and interviews | Multiple | 84 | 76 (90%) | 64 | 17 (27%) | Living ± 5 year and sex |
| Apter et al.[145]* | 1993 | Israel | DSM-III | Official records and interviews | Principal | 43 | 35 (81%) | |||
| Asgard U.[147]* | 1990 | Sweden | RDC | Official records and interviews | Principal | 104 | 99 (95%) | |||
| Cavanagh et al.[14] | 1999 | Scotland | DSM-III | Official records and interviews | Principal | 45 | 44 (98%) | |||
| Cheng et al.[16]* | 1995 | Taiwan | DSM-III-R | Official records and interviews | Multiple | 116 | 114 (98%) | 226 | 130 (58%) | Living ± 5 years, sex, area of residence |
| Conwell et al.[156]* | 1996 | USA | DSM-III-R | Official records and interviews | Multiple | 141 | 127 (90%) | |||
| Foster et al.[142,144] | 1997/1999 | Ireland | DSM-III-R | Official records and interviews | Multiple | 118 | 106 (90%) | 117 | 30 (26%) | List of deceased's GP Age, gender, marital status |
| Harwood et al.[17]* | 2001 | England | ICD-10 | Official records and interviews | Multiple | 100 | 93 (93%) | 54 | N/A | Natural deaths Age and sex |
| Hawton et al.[10] | 2002 | England | ICD-10 | Official records and interviews | Multiple | 42 | 38 (90%) | 84 | 6 (7%) | Living nurses ± 10 years, specialty and seniority |
| Henriksson et al.[11] | 1993 | Finland | DSM-III-R | Official records and interviews | Multiple | 229 | 225 (98%) | |||
| Houston et al.[12] | 2001 | England | ICD-10 | Official records and interviews | Multiple | 47 | 40 (85%) | |||
| Lesage et al.[150] | 1994 | Canada | DSM-III-R | Official records and interviews | Multiple | 75 | 69 (92%) | 75 | N/A | Living Neighbourhood, age, marital status and occupation |
| Phillips et al.[9]* | 2002 | China | DSM-IV | Interviews with informants | Principal | 519 | 325 (63%) | 536 | 93 (17%) | Accidental deaths Geographical areas |
| Rich et al.[143] | 1986 | USA | DSM-III | Official records and interviews | Multiple | 283 | 258 (91%) | |||
| Runeson B.[153] | 1989 | Sweden | DSM-III-R | Official records and interviews | Principal | 58 | 57 (98%) | |||
| Shaffer et al.[18]* | 1996 | USA | DSM-III | Official records and interviews | Multiple | 119 | 108 (91%) | |||
| Shaffi et al.[13]* | 1988 | USA | DSM-III | Official records and interviews | Multiple | 21 | 20 (95%) | 21 | 11 (52%) | Living friends Sex, age, race, education, religion, income, and father's education |
| Vijayakumar et al.[159]* | 1999 | India | DSM-III-R | Official records and interviews | Principal | 100 | 88 (88%) | 100 | 14 (14%) | Living SES, sex and ± 2 years |
| Waern et al.[154]* | 2002 | Sweden | DSM-IV | Official records and interviews | Multiple | 85 | 82 (96%) | 153 | 28 (18%) | Living Sex, ± 2 years |
| Boardman et al.[152] | 1999 | England | ICD-10 | Multiple official records | Multiple | 212 | 151 (71%) | 212 | 40 (19%) | Unnatural deaths ± 5 years and sex |
| Cantor et al.[157] | 1989 | Australia | DSM-III-R | Multiple official records | Principal | 47 | 41 (87%) | |||
| Groholt et al.[149]* | 1997 | Norway | DSM-III-R | Multiple official records | Multiple | 121 | 90 (74%) | |||
| Thacore et al.[158] | 2000 | Australia | ICD-9 | Multiple official records | Principal | 75 | 46 (65%) | |||
| Graham et al.[15] | 1992 | Australia | DSM-III | Multiple official records | Multiple | 136 | 120 (88%) | |||
| Brent et al.[148] | 1999 | USA | DSM-III | Interviews with informants | Multiple | 140 | 115 (82%) | 131 | 32 (24%) | Living Age, race, gender, country and SES |
| Cerel et al.[155] | 2000 | USA | RDC | Interviews with informants | Multiple | 15 | 13 (87%) | 201 | 70 (35%) | Non-suicide bereaved family |
| Arato et al.[146]* | 1987 | Hungary | RDC | Interviews with informants | Principal | 200 | 162 (81%) |
* Based on axis I disorders only.
N/A – information not available or not clear
Odds Ratios for major outcome variables across sexes
| Disorders | n for females | n for males | OR (95% CI) | χ2 | p-value |
| Any psychiatric disorders | 398 | 801 | 0.98 (0.70–1.36) | 0.02 | 0.881 |
| Schizophrenia | 17 | 44 | 1.30 (0.71–2.39) | 0.79 | 0.373 |
| Other psychotic disorders or psychosis NOS | 15 | 40 | 1.33 (0.71–2.56) | 0.88 | 0.347 |
| Somatoform, anxiety and neurotic disorders | 33 | 83 | 1.27 (0.85–1.97) | 1.24 | 0.265 |
| Bipolar disorders | 26 | 43 | 0.81 (0.48–1.38) | 0.68 | 0.409 |
| Organic disorders | 6 | 15 | 1.24 (0.45–3.60) | 0.20 | 0.656 |
| Adjustment disorders | 31 | 64 | 1.02 (0.64–1.64) | 0.01 | 0.917 |
| Alcohol problems | 73 | 272 | 2.19 (1.63–2.95) | 29.57 | 0.000 |
| Other substances problems | 32 | 122 | 2.02 (1.32–3.10) | 11.89 | 0.001 |
| Any substances problems | 110 | 436 | 3.58 (2.78–4.61) | 110.18 | 0.000 |
| Personality disorders | 41 | 153 | 2.01 (1.38–2.95) | 14.60 | 0.000 |
| Childhood disorders | 13 | 117 | 4.95 (2.69–9.31) | 34.57 | 0.000 |
| Depressive disorders | 199 | 268 | 0.53 (0.42–0.68) | 28.56 | 0.000 |
| Any affective disorders | 272 | 454 | 0.66 (0.53–0.83) | 12.91 | 0.000 |
| Other disorders | 16 | 12 | 0.36 (0.16–0.82) | 7.44 | 0.006 |
Descriptive analysis of the age and sex of subjects
| All regions | ||
| ♂ | 28.5 ± 12.8 | 880 [11,18,143,145,148-150,158] |
| ♀ | 34.5 ± 17.8 | 333 [11,18,143,147-149,158] |
| Both sexes* | 41.6 ± 17.8 | 794 [11,14,17,149,151,154,157,158] |
| American Studies | ||
| ♂ | 26.0 ± 12.3 | 491 [18,143,148,150] |
| ♀ | 27.3 ± 18.9 | 127 [18,143,148] |
| Both sexes* | N/A | N/A |
| European Studies | ||
| ♂ | 27.2 ± 15.4 | 314 [11,145,149] |
| ♀ | 37.9 ± 18.9 | 191 [11,147,149] |
| Both sexes* | 42.3 ± 20.8 | 672 [11,14,15,17,151,154] |
| Australian Studies | ||
| ♂ | 42.5 | 491 [158] |
| ♀ | 45.7 | 15 [158] |
| Both sexes* | 39.5 ± 5.2 | 122 [157,158] |
| Asian Studies | ||
| ♂ | N/A | N/A |
| ♀ | N/A | N/A |
| Both sexes* | N/A | N/A |
N/A – information not available
* Both sexes refers to studies in which information on age by sex was not provided, and thus, only mean age for the whole sample was available.
Diagnostic distribution across different regions of the world
| European (%) | North American (%) | Australian (%) | Asian (%) | χ2 | |
| Affective disorders | 753 (48.5) | 390 (33.6) | 71 (32.7) | 335 (51.3) | 11.3* |
| Substances-related disorders | 390 (18.6) | 573 (40.1) | 106 (24.1) | 135 (26.7) | 12.1* |
| Schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders or psychosis NOS | 125 (7.5) | 42 (4.2) | 29 (24.3) | 53 (8.4) | 24.1* |
| Personality disorders | 197 (16.8) | 75 (13.4) | 75 (17.7) | 20 (17.7) | 1.2n.s. |
| At least one Diagnosis | 1298 (88.8) | 710 (89.7) | 207 (78.9) | 527 (83.0) | 6.4n.s. |
* Significant at p ≤ 0.01
n.s.Non significant