Socio-economic position and suicidal ideation in men
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Authors
Pirkis, Jane
Currier, Dianne
Butterworth, Peter
Milner, Allison
Kavanagh, Anne
Tibble, Holly
Robinson, Jo
Spittal, Matthew
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MDPI
Abstract
People in low socio-economic positions are over-represented in suicide statistics and
are at heightened risk for non-fatal suicidal thoughts and behaviours. Few studies have tried to
tease out the relationship between individual-level and area-level socio-economic position, however.
We used data from Ten to Men (the Australian Longitudinal Study on Male Health) to investigate
the relationship between individual-level and area-level socio-economic position and suicidal
thinking in 12,090 men. We used a measure of unemployment/employment and occupational
skill level as our individual-level indicator of socio-economic position. We used the Index of Relative
Socio-Economic Disadvantage (a composite multidimensional construct created by the Australian
Bureau of Statistics that combines information from a range of area-level variables, including the
prevalence of unemployment and employment in low skilled occupations) as our area-level indicator.
We assessed suicidal thinking using the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9). We found that even
after controlling for common predictors of suicidal thinking; low individual-level and area-level
socio-economic position heightened risk. Individual-level socio-economic position appeared to exert
the greater influence of the two; however. There is an onus on policy makers and planners from
within and outside the mental health sector to take individual- and area-level socio-economic position
into account when they are developing strategic initiatives.
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International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
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Open Access
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Creative Commons Attribution License
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