Suicide Mortality Across Broad Occupational Groups in Greece: A Descriptive Study

Background: Several studies have investigated the relationship between specific occupations and suicide mortality, as suicide rates differ by profession. The aim of this study was to investigate suicide mortality ratios across broad occupational groups in Greece for both sexes in the period 2000–200...

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Main Authors: Evangelos C. Alexopoulos, Katerina Kavalidou, Fani Messolora
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2016-03-01
Series:Safety and Health at Work
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2093791115000773
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spelling doaj-64f67cc3955f47b6bc7eab2425824d342020-11-25T00:32:41ZengElsevierSafety and Health at Work2093-79112016-03-01711510.1016/j.shaw.2015.09.004Suicide Mortality Across Broad Occupational Groups in Greece: A Descriptive StudyEvangelos C. Alexopoulos0Katerina Kavalidou1Fani Messolora2Faculty of Social Sciences, Hellenic Open University, Patras, GreeceSuicidal Behaviour Research Laboratory, Institute of Health and Wellbeing, University of Glasgow, Gartnavel Royal Hospital, Glasgow, UKPeristeri's Regional Health Unit, Social Insurance Institute (IKA), Athens, GreeceBackground: Several studies have investigated the relationship between specific occupations and suicide mortality, as suicide rates differ by profession. The aim of this study was to investigate suicide mortality ratios across broad occupational groups in Greece for both sexes in the period 2000–2009. Methods: Data of suicide deaths were retrieved from the Hellenic Statistical Authority and comparative mortality ratios were calculated. Occupational classification was based on the International Classification of Occupations (ISCO-88) and the coding for Intentional self-harm (X60–X84) was based on the international classification of diseases (ICD-10). Results: Male dominant occupations, mainly armed forces, skilled farmers and elementary workers, and female high-skilled occupations were seen as high risk groups for suicide in a period of 10 years. The age-productive group of 30–39 years in Greek male elementary workers and the 50–59 age-productive group of Greek professional women proved to have the most elevated number of suicide deaths. Conclusion: Further research is needed into the work-related stressors of occupations with high suicide mortality risk and focused suicide prevention strategies should be applied within vulnerable working age populations.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2093791115000773genderoccupational healthoccupational mortalityrisk assessmentsuicide
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Evangelos C. Alexopoulos
Katerina Kavalidou
Fani Messolora
spellingShingle Evangelos C. Alexopoulos
Katerina Kavalidou
Fani Messolora
Suicide Mortality Across Broad Occupational Groups in Greece: A Descriptive Study
Safety and Health at Work
gender
occupational health
occupational mortality
risk assessment
suicide
author_facet Evangelos C. Alexopoulos
Katerina Kavalidou
Fani Messolora
author_sort Evangelos C. Alexopoulos
title Suicide Mortality Across Broad Occupational Groups in Greece: A Descriptive Study
title_short Suicide Mortality Across Broad Occupational Groups in Greece: A Descriptive Study
title_full Suicide Mortality Across Broad Occupational Groups in Greece: A Descriptive Study
title_fullStr Suicide Mortality Across Broad Occupational Groups in Greece: A Descriptive Study
title_full_unstemmed Suicide Mortality Across Broad Occupational Groups in Greece: A Descriptive Study
title_sort suicide mortality across broad occupational groups in greece: a descriptive study
publisher Elsevier
series Safety and Health at Work
issn 2093-7911
publishDate 2016-03-01
description Background: Several studies have investigated the relationship between specific occupations and suicide mortality, as suicide rates differ by profession. The aim of this study was to investigate suicide mortality ratios across broad occupational groups in Greece for both sexes in the period 2000–2009. Methods: Data of suicide deaths were retrieved from the Hellenic Statistical Authority and comparative mortality ratios were calculated. Occupational classification was based on the International Classification of Occupations (ISCO-88) and the coding for Intentional self-harm (X60–X84) was based on the international classification of diseases (ICD-10). Results: Male dominant occupations, mainly armed forces, skilled farmers and elementary workers, and female high-skilled occupations were seen as high risk groups for suicide in a period of 10 years. The age-productive group of 30–39 years in Greek male elementary workers and the 50–59 age-productive group of Greek professional women proved to have the most elevated number of suicide deaths. Conclusion: Further research is needed into the work-related stressors of occupations with high suicide mortality risk and focused suicide prevention strategies should be applied within vulnerable working age populations.
topic gender
occupational health
occupational mortality
risk assessment
suicide
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2093791115000773
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