Suicide Risk and the Economic Crisis: An Exploratory Analysis of the Case of Milan.

In the past five years, several scientific articles have claimed that the increase some countries have registered in suicide rates since 2008 is somehow related to the economic crisis. Other research has suggested that the impact of specific economic problems on the probability of suicidal behavior...

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Main Authors: Isabella Merzagora, Giulia Mugellini, Alberto Amadasi, Guido Travaini
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2016-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5199046?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-839db5f55cda49b68b95989eb2f4cafb2020-11-24T20:45:59ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032016-01-011112e016624410.1371/journal.pone.0166244Suicide Risk and the Economic Crisis: An Exploratory Analysis of the Case of Milan.Isabella MerzagoraGiulia MugelliniAlberto AmadasiGuido TravainiIn the past five years, several scientific articles have claimed that the increase some countries have registered in suicide rates since 2008 is somehow related to the economic crisis. Other research has suggested that the impact of specific economic problems on the probability of suicidal behavior is often mediated by other individual-level factors, mainly psychological and physical, whose negative influence is exacerbated by reductions in the availability of health and social care during an economic crisis. On the basis of almost 1,000 cases of suicide collected by the Institute of Forensic Medicine in the province of Milan, this article aims at testing whether suicidal probability during an economic crisis is influenced by the interaction between an individual's employment status and the presence of psychological or physical disease. Using a binary logistic regression model, this article demonstrates that the likelihood of suicide during an economic crisis is three times higher for persons affected by a severe disease, either physical or psychological, than for people who are not affected (OR = 3.156; 95% CI = 1.066-9.339; p = 0.38). Neither employment status nor the interaction between employment status and health status contributed to the difference between the suicide rate before and during the economic crisis.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5199046?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Isabella Merzagora
Giulia Mugellini
Alberto Amadasi
Guido Travaini
spellingShingle Isabella Merzagora
Giulia Mugellini
Alberto Amadasi
Guido Travaini
Suicide Risk and the Economic Crisis: An Exploratory Analysis of the Case of Milan.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Isabella Merzagora
Giulia Mugellini
Alberto Amadasi
Guido Travaini
author_sort Isabella Merzagora
title Suicide Risk and the Economic Crisis: An Exploratory Analysis of the Case of Milan.
title_short Suicide Risk and the Economic Crisis: An Exploratory Analysis of the Case of Milan.
title_full Suicide Risk and the Economic Crisis: An Exploratory Analysis of the Case of Milan.
title_fullStr Suicide Risk and the Economic Crisis: An Exploratory Analysis of the Case of Milan.
title_full_unstemmed Suicide Risk and the Economic Crisis: An Exploratory Analysis of the Case of Milan.
title_sort suicide risk and the economic crisis: an exploratory analysis of the case of milan.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2016-01-01
description In the past five years, several scientific articles have claimed that the increase some countries have registered in suicide rates since 2008 is somehow related to the economic crisis. Other research has suggested that the impact of specific economic problems on the probability of suicidal behavior is often mediated by other individual-level factors, mainly psychological and physical, whose negative influence is exacerbated by reductions in the availability of health and social care during an economic crisis. On the basis of almost 1,000 cases of suicide collected by the Institute of Forensic Medicine in the province of Milan, this article aims at testing whether suicidal probability during an economic crisis is influenced by the interaction between an individual's employment status and the presence of psychological or physical disease. Using a binary logistic regression model, this article demonstrates that the likelihood of suicide during an economic crisis is three times higher for persons affected by a severe disease, either physical or psychological, than for people who are not affected (OR = 3.156; 95% CI = 1.066-9.339; p = 0.38). Neither employment status nor the interaction between employment status and health status contributed to the difference between the suicide rate before and during the economic crisis.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5199046?pdf=render
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