Risk factors associated with suicide clusters in Australian youth: Identifying who is at risk and the mechanisms associated with cluster membership

Background: It is unclear who is at risk of being involved in a suicide cluster and whether suicide clusters are influenced by the social transmission of suicidal behaviour, assortative relating, or a combination of both. Methods: Suicide clusters involving two or more young people were identified f...

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Main Authors: Nicole T.M. Hill, Matthew J. Spittal, Jane Pirkis, Michelle Torok, Jo Robinson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2020-12-01
Series:EClinicalMedicine
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2589537020303758
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spelling doaj-6503228a729649a89a72393cdf10ef672020-11-25T04:12:26ZengElsevierEClinicalMedicine2589-53702020-12-0129100631Risk factors associated with suicide clusters in Australian youth: Identifying who is at risk and the mechanisms associated with cluster membershipNicole T.M. Hill0Matthew J. Spittal1Jane Pirkis2Michelle Torok3Jo Robinson4Telethon Kids Institute, 15 Hospital Ave, Nedlands, Perth, WA 6008, Australia; Orygen, Centre for Youth Mental Health, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia; Corresponding author at: Telethon Kids Institute, 15 Hospital Ave, Nedlands, Perth, WA 6008, Australia.Centre for Mental Health, Melbourne School of Population and Global Health, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, AustraliaCentre for Mental Health, Melbourne School of Population and Global Health, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, AustraliaBlack Dog Institute, University of New South Wales, Sydney, AustraliaOrygen, Centre for Youth Mental Health, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, AustraliaBackground: It is unclear who is at risk of being involved in a suicide cluster and whether suicide clusters are influenced by the social transmission of suicidal behaviour, assortative relating, or a combination of both. Methods: Suicide clusters involving two or more young people were identified from the free text of electronic police and coroners reports in Australia's National Coronial Information System in a nationwide cross-sectional study. The duration of survival among exposed cases were estimated using time-to-event methods. The casewise concordance of demographic, social and clinical characteristics and circumstances of death were examined among index and exposed cases. Findings: We identified links between 117 young people (51 suicide clusters). 50% of young people died within 90 days of the index suicide. Individuals exposed to railway suicide had an 80% probability of dying by the same method. Those exposed to the suicide of a person aged 10–18 years had an 86% probability of being from the same age group. Young people had a 67% and 60% probability of sharing the same characteristics as the index suicide when the index suicide resided in a remote community or was of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander descent. Interpretation: Suicide clusters may be associated with both the social transmission of suicidal behaviour and assortative relating. Individuals who were close to the deceased should be provided with access to postvention support, particularly within the first 90 days of exposure to an index suicide. Funding: Australian Rotary Health, National Health and Medical Research Council.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2589537020303758
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nicole T.M. Hill
Matthew J. Spittal
Jane Pirkis
Michelle Torok
Jo Robinson
spellingShingle Nicole T.M. Hill
Matthew J. Spittal
Jane Pirkis
Michelle Torok
Jo Robinson
Risk factors associated with suicide clusters in Australian youth: Identifying who is at risk and the mechanisms associated with cluster membership
EClinicalMedicine
author_facet Nicole T.M. Hill
Matthew J. Spittal
Jane Pirkis
Michelle Torok
Jo Robinson
author_sort Nicole T.M. Hill
title Risk factors associated with suicide clusters in Australian youth: Identifying who is at risk and the mechanisms associated with cluster membership
title_short Risk factors associated with suicide clusters in Australian youth: Identifying who is at risk and the mechanisms associated with cluster membership
title_full Risk factors associated with suicide clusters in Australian youth: Identifying who is at risk and the mechanisms associated with cluster membership
title_fullStr Risk factors associated with suicide clusters in Australian youth: Identifying who is at risk and the mechanisms associated with cluster membership
title_full_unstemmed Risk factors associated with suicide clusters in Australian youth: Identifying who is at risk and the mechanisms associated with cluster membership
title_sort risk factors associated with suicide clusters in australian youth: identifying who is at risk and the mechanisms associated with cluster membership
publisher Elsevier
series EClinicalMedicine
issn 2589-5370
publishDate 2020-12-01
description Background: It is unclear who is at risk of being involved in a suicide cluster and whether suicide clusters are influenced by the social transmission of suicidal behaviour, assortative relating, or a combination of both. Methods: Suicide clusters involving two or more young people were identified from the free text of electronic police and coroners reports in Australia's National Coronial Information System in a nationwide cross-sectional study. The duration of survival among exposed cases were estimated using time-to-event methods. The casewise concordance of demographic, social and clinical characteristics and circumstances of death were examined among index and exposed cases. Findings: We identified links between 117 young people (51 suicide clusters). 50% of young people died within 90 days of the index suicide. Individuals exposed to railway suicide had an 80% probability of dying by the same method. Those exposed to the suicide of a person aged 10–18 years had an 86% probability of being from the same age group. Young people had a 67% and 60% probability of sharing the same characteristics as the index suicide when the index suicide resided in a remote community or was of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander descent. Interpretation: Suicide clusters may be associated with both the social transmission of suicidal behaviour and assortative relating. Individuals who were close to the deceased should be provided with access to postvention support, particularly within the first 90 days of exposure to an index suicide. Funding: Australian Rotary Health, National Health and Medical Research Council.
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2589537020303758
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