Literature DB >> 21448096

Gender differences in relation to suicides committed in the capital of Montenegro (Podgorica) in the period 2000-2006.

Lidija Injac Stevović1, Miroslava Jašović-Gašić, Olivera Vuković, Mirko Peković, Nataša Terzić.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The purpose of the study was to research gender differences in suicides committed in Podgorica between 2000 and 2006, including sociodemographic variables (e.g. age, marital status, education etc.), methods of and motives for committing suicide. Data were taken from the Police Directorate of Montenegro. SUBJECTS AND METHODS: We used data on 220 males and 83 females who committed suicide. Statistical analysis was done by using the crude specific rate. Significance between two independent crude rates is constructed around their 95% confidence intervals and it utilizes the difference between the two rates (D) to determine significance.
RESULTS: The incidence of suicide in males was found to be higher than in females (the male to female suicide ratio is 2.6 to 1). Females were older than males. Females had completed elementary education more frequently , and they were single or divorced or widows. Males had completed secondary education more frequently and they were married. The most frequent employment status of both gender groups implied pensioner and unemployment statuses. There was a significant difference in suicide rates between the genders during the reporting period. Suicide rates increase with age in both genders. Males chose firearms, hanging, strangulation and suffocation and jumping. Females chose hanging, strangulation and suffocation, jumping and drowning as the most frequent methods of suicide. The most frequent motive for suicide in both gender groups was physical illness. The second most frequent motive was mental illness. Emotional and financial difficulties were motives which were more common in males, whereas family problems appeared to be motives two times more frequent in females.
CONCLUSIONS: The complex multifactorial etiology of suicide suggests the need to consider gender differences when developing effective strategies for the therapy and the prevention of suicide.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21448096

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychiatr Danub        ISSN: 0353-5053            Impact factor:   1.063


  3 in total

1.  Impact of income inequality and other social determinants on suicide rate in Brazil.

Authors:  Daiane Borges Machado; Davide Rasella; Darci Neves Dos Santos
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2015-04-30       Impact factor: 3.240

Review 2.  Poverty and suicide research in low- and middle-income countries: systematic mapping of literature published in English and a proposed research agenda.

Authors:  J Bantjes; V Iemmi; E Coast; K Channer; T Leone; D McDaid; A Palfreyman; B Stephens; C Lund
Journal:  Glob Ment Health (Camb)       Date:  2016-12-13

3.  Influence of the global crisis of 2008 and the brazilian political oscillations of 2014 on suicide rates: An analysis of the period from 2002 to 2017.

Authors:  Eliane Maria Spiecker; Patrícia Costa Mincoff Barbanti; Paulo Acácio Egger; Maria Dalva de Barros Carvalho; Sandra Marisa Pelloso; Marta Rovery de Souza; Luciano de Andrade; Catherine A Staton; Marcia Lorena Alves; Eniuce Menezes de Souza; Raíssa Bocchi Pedroso; João Ricardo Nickenig Vissoci
Journal:  SSM Popul Health       Date:  2021-02-13
  3 in total

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