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RESEARCH PRODUCT
What calls for service tell us about suicide: A 7-year spatio-temporal analysis of neighborhood correlates of suicide-related calls.
Marisol LilaMiriam MarcoEnrique GraciaAntonio López-quílezsubject
AdultMaleRural PopulationPopulation ageingAdolescentSciencemedia_common.quotation_subjectImmigrationDistribution (economics)Emigrants and ImmigrantsSuicide preventionArticle03 medical and health sciencesYoung Adult0302 clinical medicineRuralitySpatio-Temporal AnalysisResidence CharacteristicsRisk FactorsEconomic StatusHumans030212 general & internal medicineSocioeconomic statusmedia_commonAgedPopulation DensityFamily Characteristics030505 public healthMultidisciplinarybusiness.industryQRBayes TheoremCensusMiddle AgedEpidemiologic StudiesSuicideSocial deprivationGeographySocioeconomic FactorsSpainMedicineFemale0305 other medical sciencebusinessDemographydescription
AbstractPrevious research has shown that neighborhood-level variables such as social deprivation, social fragmentation or rurality are related to suicide risk, but most of these studies have been conducted in the U.S. or northern European countries. The aim of this study was to analyze the spatio-temporal distribution of suicide in a southern European city (Valencia, Spain), and determine whether this distribution was related to a set of neighborhood-level characteristics. We used suicide-related calls for service as an indicator of suicide cases (n = 6,537), and analyzed the relationship of the outcome variable with several neighborhood-level variables: economic status, education level, population density, residential instability, one-person households, immigrant concentration, and population aging. A Bayesian autoregressive model was used to study the spatio-temporal distribution at the census block group level for a 7-year period (2010–2016). Results showed that neighborhoods with lower levels of education and population density, and higher levels of residential instability, one-person households, and an aging population had higher levels of suicide-related calls for service. Immigrant concentration and economic status did not make a relevant contribution to the model. These results could help to develop better-targeted community-level suicide prevention strategies.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2018-01-05 | Scientific reports |