Hospitalization for physical illness and risk of subsequent suicide: a population study.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE
To examine suicide risk in relation to physical illness across a broad range of illnesses, including hospitalization history,
specific organ or system illness and comorbidity.
DESIGN
A nested case-control study.
SETTING
Data were retrieved from five Danish national registers.
SUBJECTS
On the basis of the entire population of Denmark, this study included 27 262 suicide cases, and 468 007 live controls matched
for sex and date of birth.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES
Risk of suicide was assessed using conditional logistic regression.
RESULTS
In the study population, 63.5% of suicide cases and 44.5% of comparison controls had a history of hospitalization for physical
illness. A physical illness significantly increased the risk of subsequent suicide (incidence rate ratios 2.13, 95% CI 2.07-2.18)
with a substantially greater effect in women than in men (P < 0.01). The elevated risk increased progressively with frequency
and recency of hospitalization and was significant for diseases occurring in all organs or systems of the body. Comorbidity
involving several organs or systems increased the risk substantially. The associated estimates were to some extent reduced
but remained highly significant after adjustment for psychiatric history and socio-economic status. Taking into account both
prevalence and adjusted effect size, physical illness accounted for 24.4%, 21.0% and 32.3% of population attributable risk
for suicide in total, male and female populations, respectively.
CONCLUSIONS
Physical illness constitutes a significant risk factor for suicide independent of psychiatric and socio-economic factors.
Clinicians treating physically ill patients should be aware of the risk, especially amongst those with multiple or recent
hospitalizations, or multiple comorbidities.
Links
Authors
Qin P, Webb R, Kapur N, Sørensen HT
Institution
National Centre for Register-Based Research, University of Aarhus, Aarhus, Denmark. pq@ncrr.dk
Source
Journal of internal medicine 273:1 2013 Jan pg 48-58MeSH
DenmarkFemale
Hospitalization
Humans
Incidence
Male
Population Surveillance
Registries
Retrospective Studies
Risk Assessment
Risk Factors
Sex Distribution
Sex Factors
Suicide
Survival Rate
Pub Type(s)
Comparative StudyJournal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Language
eng
PubMed ID
22775487
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