| Literature DB >> 24130673 |
Yutaka Ono1, Akio Sakai, Kotaro Otsuka, Hidenori Uda, Hirofumi Oyama, Naoki Ishizuka, Shuichi Awata, Yasushi Ishida, Hiroto Iwasa, Yuichi Kamei, Yutaka Motohashi, Jun Nakamura, Nobuyuki Nishi, Naoki Watanabe, Toshihiko Yotsumoto, Atsuo Nakagawa, Yuriko Suzuki, Miyuki Tajima, Eriko Tanaka, Hironori Sakai, Naohiro Yonemoto.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Multilevel and multimodal interventions have been suggested for suicide prevention. However, few studies have reported the outcomes of such interventions for suicidal behaviours.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24130673 PMCID: PMC3794031 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0074902
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Location map of the study areas.
Pink-coloured areas indicate rural study areas. Orange-coloured areas indicate highly populated study areas.
Figure 2Flow chart of the study.
| Intervention Level | Target | Objectives and Actions | |
| 1 | Leadership involvement | Local government | Leadership involvement is a key to effectively implementing long-term programs that utilize a commitment of society at multiple levels and succeed in establishing community support networks. Messages from the mayor have a strong impact on the efficiency of community development and community networking. |
| a) Publicizing messages from the mayor to all officials and citizens reminding them of the importance of suicide prevention. | |||
| b) Establishing a regional committee dedicated to suicide prevention chaired by the mayor to promote organization-wide awareness of mental health and suicide prevention and facilitate the collaboration of different sections of the local government. | |||
| c) Formalizing the roles of each service section and promoting pathways to build social support networks within the public and health-related resources, intending to reinforce human relationships and connectedness in the community. | |||
| 2 | Education and awareness programs | Public | The education and awareness programs aim to reduce stigmatization of mental illness and suicide and to improve recognition of suicide risk and facilitation of help seeking. |
| a) Waging a campaign for general public education (public events, posters, websites, placards, leaflets and brochures with information about help available locally, self-tests, warning signals and treatment options and announcements of regional educational activities like lectures and seminars). | |||
| b) Providing regional educational opportunities like lectures and seminars to improve understanding of the causes and risk factors for suicidal behavior, particularly mental illness. The programs also cover awareness of availability of social resources and referral procedures for people potentially at risk. | |||
| 3 | Gatekeeper training | Community or organizational gatekeepers | Training programs targeting gatekeepers (community leaders, priests, telephone hotlines, social services, youth workers, geriatric care providers, police, physicians, nurses, pharmacists, mental health providers, and those employed in institutional settings, such as schools) aimed to facilitate their playing important roles in early detection within potentially vulnerable populations and increasing preventive functions. These programs also promote organization-wide awareness of mental health and suicide and facilitate access to mental health services. |
| a) Training community or organizational gatekeepers to provide them with an opportunity to identify at-risk individuals within different target populations and direct them to appropriate social and/or mental health services. | |||
| 4 | Supporting individuals at high risk | Individuals at high risk | Home visiting and regional social gatherings aim to reinforce human relationships and connectedness in the community. Screening aims to identify at-risk individuals and direct them to treatment. |
| a) Home visiting by regional public health nurses and psychiatrists. | |||
| b) Setting up regional social gatherings. | |||
| c) Screening to identify at-risk individuals and direct them to treatment or follow-up care providers. The focus may be on suicidal behavior directly or on risk factors, such as depression or substance abuse. | |||
| d) Support for self-help activities for high-risk groups, i.e., suicide attempters, to facilitate access to professional help. |
The intervention programs focused on building social support networks within the general public and in health-related resources, intending to reinforce human relationships and connectedness in the community.
A suicide leaves behind more victims than just the individual, as family, friends, co-workers, and the community can be impacted in many different and unique ways following a suicide. In this study, the program recommended that the local government provide appropriate care for suicide survivors (a person who survives a suicide completer; a suicide griever) to support their grief work, if necessary. Support the activities of self-help groups for suicide survivors and other related organizations.
Population characteristics at baseline (2006.1–6) in rural and highly populated areas N (%).
| Group 1 | Group2 | |||
| (Rural areas) | (Highly populated areas) | |||
| Intervention | Control | Intervention | Control | |
| n = 7 | n = 10 | n = 3 | n = 3 | |
| All | 291,459 | 339,674 | 615,586 | 704,341 |
| Sex | ||||
| Male | 136,399 (47) | 159,380 (47) | 310,301 (50) | 348,153 (49) |
| Female | 155,060 (53) | 180,294 (53) | 305,285 (50) | 356,188 (51) |
| Age | ||||
| under 25 | 47,892 (16) | 52,867 (16) | 103,218 (17) | 119,512 (17) |
| 25–64 | 157,887 (55) | 181,153 (53) | 407,801 (66) | 448,270 (64) |
| 65 and over | 85,680 (29) | 105,654 (31) | 104,567 (17) | 136,559 (19) |
| Region | ||||
| Aomori | 35,668 (12) | 60,695 (18) | – | – |
| Akita | 59,237 (20) | 66,678 (20) | – | – |
| Iwate | 55,416 (19) | 61,589 (18) | – | – |
| Minami-Kyushu | 141,138 (48) | 150,712 (44) | – | – |
| Sendai | – | – | 160,368 (26) | 197,915 (28) |
| Chiba | – | – | 411,025 (67) | 425,177 (60) |
| Kita-Kyushu | – | – | 44,193 (7) | 81,259 (12) |
| Intervention | Control | ||||||||||||||
| Combined | Completedsuicide | Suicideattempt | Population | Combined | Completedsuicide | Suicideattempt | Population | ||||||||
| N | Rate | N | Rate | N | Rate | N | N | Rate | N | Rate | N | Rate | N | ||
| Before | 2003.1-6 | 128 | 86.1 | 68 | 45.7 | 60 | 40.4 | 297,397 | 131 | 75.3 | 77 | 44.2 | 54 | 31.0 | 348,092 |
| 2003. 7-12 | 91 | 61.4 | 68 | 45.9 | 23 | 15.5 | 296,447 | 95 | 54.8 | 74 | 42.7 | 21 | 12.1 | 346,639 | |
| 2004.1-6 | 126 | 85.2 | 105 | 71.0 | 21 | 14.2 | 295,655 | 94 | 54.4 | 69 | 40.0 | 25 | 14.5 | 345,415 | |
| 2004. 7-12 | 70 | 47.5 | 49 | 33.3 | 21 | 14.3 | 294,665 | 122 | 71.0 | 73 | 42.5 | 49 | 28.5 | 343,825 | |
| 2005.1-6 | 77 | 52.5 | 57 | 38.8 | 20 | 13.6 | 293,589 | 80 | 46.7 | 56 | 32.7 | 24 | 14.0 | 342,382 | |
| 2005. 7-12 | 102 | 69.8 | 51 | 34.9 | 51 | 34.9 | 292,467 | 138 | 81.0 | 69 | 40.5 | 69 | 40.5 | 340,927 | |
| Reference | 2006. 1-6 | 91 | 62.4 | 62 | 42.5 | 29 | 19.9 | 291,459 | 139 | 81.8 | 76 | 44.7 | 63 | 37.1 | 339,674 |
| Study |
| 98 | 67.6 | 72 | 49.6 | 26 | 17.9 | 290,122 | 89 | 52.7 | 57 | 33.8 | 32 | 19.0 | 337,668 |
| period |
| 89 | 61.6 | 56 | 38.8 | 33 | 22.8 | 288,882 | 103 | 61.3 | 62 | 36.9 | 41 | 24.4 | 335,894 |
|
| 66 | 45.9 | 41 | 28.5 | 25 | 17.4 | 287,276 | 103 | 61.8 | 57 | 34.2 | 46 | 27.6 | 333,409 | |
|
| 73 | 51.1 | 49 | 34.3 | 24 | 16.8 | 285,773 | 92 | 55.6 | 60 | 36.2 | 32 | 19.3 | 331,133 | |
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| 71 | 49.9 | 44 | 30.9 | 27 | 19.0 | 284,379 | 128 | 77.8 | 80 | 48.6 | 48 | 29.2 | 328,951 | |
|
| 93 | 65.7 | 61 | 43.1 | 32 | 22.6 | 283,090 | 90 | 55.0 | 61 | 37.3 | 29 | 17.7 | 326,977 | |
|
| 72 | 51.1 | 54 | 38.3 | 18 | 12.8 | 281,763 | 114 | 70.1 | 70 | 43.1 | 44 | 27.1 | 325,146 | |
Combined: Completed suicide and suicide attempt.
Rate: per 10,000 persons, per year.
| Highly populated areas | |||||||||||||||
| Intervention | Control | ||||||||||||||
| Combined | Completedsuicide | Suicideattempt | Population | Combined | Completedsuicide | Suicideattempt | Population | ||||||||
| N | Rate | N | Rate | N | Rate | N | N | Rate | N | Rate | N | Rate | N | ||
| Before |
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| 176 | 50.2 | 99 | 28.3 | 77 | 22.0 | 700,674 |
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| 212 | 60.5 | 101 | 28.8 | 111 | 31.7 | 701,360 | |
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| 168 | 47.9 | 79 | 22.5 | 89 | 25.4 | 702,094 | |
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| 171 | 48.7 | 84 | 23.9 | 87 | 24.8 | 702,467 | |
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| 199 | 56.6 | 94 | 26.7 | 105 | 29.9 | 702,882 | |
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| 174 | 49.5 | 87 | 24.7 | 87 | 24.7 | 703,589 | |
| Reference |
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| 197 | 55.9 | 97 | 27.5 | 100 | 28.4 | 704,341 |
| Study |
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| 208 | 59.0 | 83 | 23.5 | 125 | 35.5 | 705,159 |
| period |
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| 208 | 58.9 | 89 | 25.2 | 119 | 33.7 | 706,016 |
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| 190 | 53.7 | 91 | 25.7 | 99 | 28.0 | 707,088 | |
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| 202 | 57.0 | 89 | 25.1 | 113 | 31.9 | 708,205 | |
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| 222 | 62.6 | 87 | 24.5 | 135 | 38.0 | 709,661 | |
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| 190 | 53.4 | 86 | 24.2 | 104 | 29.2 | 711,167 | |
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| 208 | 58.4 | 92 | 25.8 | 116 | 32.6 | 711,837 | |
Combined: Completed suicide and suicide attempt.
Rate: per 10000 persons, per year.
Figure 3Figure 3 shows the proportion of adherence with required components of the intervention in the rural areas.
The blue line indicates the proportion of the intervention group, and the red line indicates that of the control group. The dotted lines indicate interquartile ranges. The proportion is shown from the 3.5 years before the start of the study period. The six-month period before the start of the study period was the reference period.
Figure 4Figure 4 shows the proportion of adherence with required components of the intervention in the highly populated areas.
The blue line indicates the proportion of the intervention group, and the red line indicates that of the control group. The dotted lines indicate interquartile ranges. The proportion is shown from the 3.5 years before the start of the study period. The six-month period before the start of the study period was the reference period.
Figure 5Primary outcome (composite outcome, consisting of completed suicides and suicide attempts requiring admission to an emergency ward for critical care) for all and for subgroups (sex and age) in rural areas and in highly populated areas.
Figure 6Secondary outcome (completed suicides) for all and for subgroups in rural areas and in highly populated areas.
Figure 7Secondary outcome (suicide attempts) for all and for subgroups in rural areas and in highly populated areas.
Related studies.
| Study | Population | Study Size, Sites | Sex, Age | Study Design | Intervention | Pre suicide rate | Duration | Compliance | Outcome | Analysis | Results |
| Knox et al., BMJ. 2003 Dec 13; 327(7428):1376. | US Air Force personnel | 5,260,292 | About 84% men | (Quasi-experimental) pre-post design | Multimodal (10 initiatives) | 1990–6 (median 13.1) | 5 years | Over 80% | Completed suicides, homicide, accidental death,?family?violence | ?2 test for linear trend with the Mantel-Haenszel, and relative-risk (RR),(No adjustment for sex and age) | Significant 33% reduction of suicide (RR 0.67, 0.57–0.80) compared to control |
| Hegerl et al., Psychol Med. 2006; 36(9):1225–33. | Inhabitants living in the city | 720,000 | No data (no differences between pre-post) | (Non-randomised) concurrent comparative (a city vs. a city) design | 4 levels; Training of primary care physicians, public campaign for depression, corporation with facilitators and self-help activities support | Intervention (about 18) vs. control (about 15) | 2 years | Unknown percentage (details of activities only) | Completed suicide, suicide attempted, And combined (suicide acts) | Change rate and χ2 test (stratified sex and years, but not adjusted) | 19.4% to 24% reduction suicide acts rate (p = 0.082, 0.004) compared to control |
| Intervention: Nuremberg, 480,000 | |||||||||||
| Control: Wurzburg 270,000 | |||||||||||
| Szanto et al., Arch Gen Psychiatry. 2007; 64(8): 914–20. | A region with a igh suicide rate in Hungary | 127,000 | 48% were men, 22% were over age 60 | (Non-randomised) concurrent comparative(a region vs. a region) design | Training of primary care physicians and nurse, plus telephone psychiatrist consultation | Intervention (median 57.5) vs. control (median 56) | 5 years | About 60% (39–90%) | Completed suicides (from police), prescription of anti-depressants, alcohol related death and unemployment | Poisson log-link function, Mixed linear models with repeated measures (adjusted years, stratified sex, but not adjusted age) | No significant difference between intervention and control overall, but female suicide decreased by 34% in intervention and increased by 90% in control; significant decrease compared to county and country (Hungary) levels. |
| Intervention: Kiskunhalas,73,000 (44,000 in villages and 29,000 in a town) with 28 GPs | |||||||||||
| Control: Bacs-Kuskun,54,000 (22,000 in villages and 32,000 in a town) | |||||||||||
| NOCOMIT-J | Inhabitants living in high suicide-rate areas in Japan | 631,133 (rural area) | 47% were men, 30% were 65 over aged | (Non-randomised) controlled (matched) concurrent comparative (2 areas and 4 regions) design | Multimodal (4 levels) | Intervention (median 42.5)vs. control (median 42.5) in rural areas | 3.5 years | About 70% in rural areas, About 55% in highly populated areas | Completed suicides from government), suicide attempts, and combined | Poisson log-link function, Marginal models in repeated measures with GEE (adjusted sex, age and years) | 9% reduction, not significant, but men 23% (p = 0.0485), over 65 24%(p = 0.062) reduction compared to concurrent control |
| 7 intervention vs. 10 control | |||||||||||
| 1,319,927 (highly populated area) | Intervention (median 22.9) vs. control (median 26.7) in highly populated areas | ||||||||||
| 4 interventions vs. 4 controls |