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- Title
Self-Harm Events and Suicide Deaths Among Autistic Individuals in Ontario, Canada.
- Authors
Lai, Meng-Chuan; Saunders, Natasha R.; Huang, Anjie; Artani, Azmina; Wilton, Andrew S.; Zaheer, Juveria; Ameis, Stephanie H.; Brown, Hilary K.; Lunsky, Yona
- Abstract
Key Points: Question: What are the sex-stratified rates of self-harm events and suicide death among autistic individuals vs nonautistic individuals and the associated sociodemographic and clinical risk factors? Findings: In this cohort study including 379 630 individuals regarding self-harm findings and 334 690 individuals regarding suicide death findings in Ontario, Canada, autistic females had an 83% increased risk and autistic males had a 47% increased risk of self-harm compared with nonautistic individuals, when accounting for neighborhood income and rurality, intellectual disabilities, and psychiatric diagnoses. The crude hazard ratio showed that autistic females had a 98% increased risk and autistic males had a 34% increased risk of suicide death, but these increases were associated with psychiatric diagnoses. Meaning: This study suggests that psychiatric diagnoses were significantly associated with risks of self-harm and especially suicide among autistic females and males. Importance: Reasons for elevated suicide risks among autistic people are unclear, with insufficient population-based research on sex-specific patterns to inform tailored prevention and intervention. Objectives: To examine sex-stratified rates of self-harm events and suicide death among autistic individuals compared with nonautistic individuals, as well as the associated sociodemographic and clinical risk factors. Design, Setting, and Participants: This population-based matched-cohort study using linked health administrative databases in Ontario, Canada included all individuals with physician-recorded autism diagnoses from April 1, 1988, to March 31, 2018, each matched on age and sex to 4 nonautistic individuals from the general population. Self-harm events resulting in emergency health care from April 1, 2005, to December 31, 2020, were examined for one cohort, and death by suicide and other causes from April 1, 1993, to December 31, 2018, were examined for another cohort. Statistical analyses were conducted between October 2021 and June 2023. Exposure: Physician-recorded autism diagnoses from 1988 to 2018 from health administrative databases. Main Outcomes and Measures: Autistic and nonautistic individuals who were sex stratified a priori were compared using Andersen-Gill recurrent event models on self-harm events, and cause-specific competing risk models on death by suicide or other causes. Neighborhood-level income and rurality indices, and individual-level broad diagnostic categories of intellectual disabilities, mood and anxiety disorders, schizophrenia spectrum disorders, substance use disorders, and personality disorders were covariates. Results: For self-harm events (cohort, 379 630 individuals; median age at maximum follow-up, 20 years [IQR, 15-28 years]; median age of first autism diagnosis claim for autistic individuals, 9 years [IQR, 4-15 years]; 19 800 autistic females, 56 126 autistic males 79 200 nonautistic females, and 224 504 nonautistic males), among both sexes, autism diagnoses had independent associations with self-harm events (females: relative rate, 1.83; 95% CI, 1.61-2.08; males: relative rate, 1.47; 95% CI, 1.28-1.69) after accounting for income, rurality, intellectual disabilities, and psychiatric diagnoses. For suicide death (cohort, 334 690 individuals; median age at maximum follow-up, 19 years [IQR, 14-27 years]; median age of first autism diagnosis claim for autistic individuals, 10 years [IQR, 5-16 years]; 17 982 autistic females, 48 956 autistic males, 71 928 nonautistic females, 195 824 nonautistic males), there was a significantly higher crude hazard ratio among autistic females (1.98; 95% CI, 1.11-3.56) and a nonsignificantly higher crude hazard ratio among autistic males (1.34; 95% CI, 0.99-1.82); the increased risks were associated with psychiatric diagnoses. Conclusions and Relevance: This cohort study suggests that autistic individuals experienced increased risks of self-harm events and suicide death. Psychiatric diagnoses were significantly associated with the increased risks among both sexes, especially for suicide death, and in partially sex-unique ways. Autism-tailored and autism-informed clinical and social support to reduce suicide risks should consider multifactorial mechanisms, with a particular focus on the prevention and timely treatment of psychiatric illnesses. This cohort study including all individuals with autism diagnoses recorded in health administrative databases in Ontario examines sex-stratified rates of self-harm events and suicide death among autistic individuals vs nonautistic individuals, as well as associated sociodemographic and clinical risk factors.
- Subjects
ONTARIO; SUICIDE risk factors; DATABASES; MEDICAL information storage &; retrieval systems; SOCIAL support; CONFIDENCE intervals; PSYCHOSES; MATHEMATICAL models; RISK assessment; AUTISM; THEORY; DEATH; PEOPLE with disabilities; SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors; SELF-mutilation; LONGITUDINAL method
- Publication
JAMA Network Open, 2023, Vol 6, Issue 8, pe2327415
- ISSN
2574-3805
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2023.27415