| Literature DB >> 25742882 |
Jennifer Redvers1, Peter Bjerregaard2, Heidi Eriksen3, Sahar Fanian1,4, Gwen Healey5, Vanessa Hiratsuka6, Michael Jong7, Christina Viskum Lytken Larsen2, Janice Linton8, Nathaniel Pollock7, Anne Silviken9,10, Petter Stoor9, Susan Chatwood1,11.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Suicide is a serious public health challenge in circumpolar regions, especially among Indigenous youth. Indigenous communities, government agencies and health care providers are making concerted efforts to reduce the burden of suicide and strengthen protective factors for individuals, families and communities. The persistence of suicide has made it clear that more needs to be done.Entities:
Keywords: Arctic; Indigenous; circumpolar; interventions; prevention; suicide
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25742882 PMCID: PMC4981753 DOI: 10.3402/ijch.v74.27509
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Circumpolar Health ISSN: 1239-9736 Impact factor: 1.228
Example search equation used in PubMed and Medline based on MeSH, test searches
| (intervention* OR “early intervention*” OR postvention OR prevention OR program OR service OR polic*) |
| AND |
| (Native* OR Indigenous OR Aboriginal* OR Inuit Or Sami OR Saami OR First Nation OR Metis OR Inuk OR Yup'ik OR Inuviat* OR Yupik* OR Aleut* OR Inupia* OR Alaska Native OR Dene OR Gwichin OR Athabas* OR “American Indian”) |
| AND |
| (circumpolar OR polar OR “arctic Canada” OR Nunavut OR Nunavik OR Nunatsiavut OR Inuvialuit OR Yukon OR “Northwest Territories” OR Norway OR Greenland OR Alaska OR Russia OR Sweden OR Finland OR Iceland OR Arctic OR North*) |
| AND |
| (suicid*) |
Categories used to assess final articles
| Data extraction categories | Questions and specifics |
|---|---|
| Article information | First author, year, publication type |
| Study site: community, state/territory/province, country | |
| Circumpolar Indigenous group differentiated | |
| Study population | Number of participants, timeframes |
| Ages, gender, youth vs. adult focus, other | |
| Type of intervention | Program, policy, or service |
| Descriptive summary | |
| Was suicide intervention the focus of the article? | |
| Methodology | Study design, measures used, data collection |
| Was the program/data evaluated? How? | |
| What was the outcome? | |
| Limitations: what did the authors mention that was not included or missed? | |
| Recommendations | What were the main take home messages? |
Fig. 1Database search summary. Circumpolar Indigenous suicide 2004–2014.
Published suicide interventions within differentiated Indigenous populations in the Circumpolar North 2004–2014, N=7a
| First author | Intervention | Description | Location | Indigenous population | Methods | Youth focus |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Allen et al. ( | Program: community prevention |
| Rural south-western Alaska, US | Yup'ik | Quasi-experimental, interviews, surveys | X |
| Berman ( | Program: community prevention | Community alcohol prohibitions – ineffective | 178 small Alaskan communities, US | Alaska Native | Poisson regression equations based on statistical data | |
| DeCou et al. ( | Other initiatives | Interviews are examined as a suicide intervention | Alaskan University, US | Alaska Native | In-depth semi-structured interview, background questionnaire | |
| Haggarty et al. ( | Program: training | CD-ROM training for counsellors and health providers | Nunavut, Canada | Inuit | Multiple choice and opinion questionnaires | |
| Henry et al. ( | Program: community prevention |
| Yukon-Kuskokwim region Southwest Alaska, US | Yup'ik | Attendance, video rating, self-report and statistical comparisons | X |
| Tan et al. ( | Programs: community prevention | Nunavut | Nunavut, Canada | Inuit | Content analysis, data coding | |
| Wexler et al. ( | Programs: community prevention | Digital storytelling suicide intervention initiative by project life | Northwest Alaska, US | Alaska Native | Exit survey, open-ended questions, follow up interviews | X |
Clifford et al. (12) excluded due to being a systematic review.
Fig. 2Circumpolar Indigenous suicide literature overview.