Now or later? Understanding the etiologic period of suicide

Previous research shows that the announcement of austerity measures leads to an immediate and short-lived increase in behaviour that demonstrates anxiety, stress, frustration and other mental effects. This paper uses evidence from the same natural experiment to study whether, for a given decision to...

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Main Authors: Sotiris Vandoros, Georgios Kavetsos
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2015-01-01
Series:Preventive Medicine Reports
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211335515001321
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spelling doaj-15ded1c7619d4e909985f1995bb2622c2020-11-25T01:32:01ZengElsevierPreventive Medicine Reports2211-33552015-01-012C80981110.1016/j.pmedr.2015.09.009Now or later? Understanding the etiologic period of suicideSotiris Vandoros0Georgios Kavetsos1King's College London, Franklin-Wilkins Building, 150 Stamford Street, London SE1 9NH, UKLondon School of Economics, Houghton Street, London WC2A 2AE, UKPrevious research shows that the announcement of austerity measures leads to an immediate and short-lived increase in behaviour that demonstrates anxiety, stress, frustration and other mental effects. This paper uses evidence from the same natural experiment to study whether, for a given decision to commit suicide (as documented by the overall increase over the study period), suicides follow immediately after the announcement of austerity measures in Greece; or whether this is an effect that matures in peoples' minds before being transformed into action. We use evidence from a natural experiment and follow an econometric approach. Our findings show that, despite an overall sharp increase in suicides over the study period, the increase does not follow immediately in the first few days after each such negative event. This suggests that suicides are not spontaneous. They are rather decisions that take time to mature. This time lag implies that suicides arguably attributed to recessions are, in principle, preventable and underlines the importance of mental health services.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211335515001321SuicideAusterity measuresEtiologic period
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sotiris Vandoros
Georgios Kavetsos
spellingShingle Sotiris Vandoros
Georgios Kavetsos
Now or later? Understanding the etiologic period of suicide
Preventive Medicine Reports
Suicide
Austerity measures
Etiologic period
author_facet Sotiris Vandoros
Georgios Kavetsos
author_sort Sotiris Vandoros
title Now or later? Understanding the etiologic period of suicide
title_short Now or later? Understanding the etiologic period of suicide
title_full Now or later? Understanding the etiologic period of suicide
title_fullStr Now or later? Understanding the etiologic period of suicide
title_full_unstemmed Now or later? Understanding the etiologic period of suicide
title_sort now or later? understanding the etiologic period of suicide
publisher Elsevier
series Preventive Medicine Reports
issn 2211-3355
publishDate 2015-01-01
description Previous research shows that the announcement of austerity measures leads to an immediate and short-lived increase in behaviour that demonstrates anxiety, stress, frustration and other mental effects. This paper uses evidence from the same natural experiment to study whether, for a given decision to commit suicide (as documented by the overall increase over the study period), suicides follow immediately after the announcement of austerity measures in Greece; or whether this is an effect that matures in peoples' minds before being transformed into action. We use evidence from a natural experiment and follow an econometric approach. Our findings show that, despite an overall sharp increase in suicides over the study period, the increase does not follow immediately in the first few days after each such negative event. This suggests that suicides are not spontaneous. They are rather decisions that take time to mature. This time lag implies that suicides arguably attributed to recessions are, in principle, preventable and underlines the importance of mental health services.
topic Suicide
Austerity measures
Etiologic period
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211335515001321
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