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- Title
Acute Use of Alcohol and Methods of Suicide in a US National Sample.
- Authors
Conner, Kenneth R.; Huguet, Nathalie; Caetano, Raul; Giesbrecht, Norman; McFarland, Bentson H.; Nolte, Kurt B.; Kaplan, Mark S.
- Abstract
Objectives. We explored age, gender, and racial/ethnic differences with alcohol use and firearms, hanging or asphyxiation, and poisoning methods of suicide. Methods. We analyzed data for 37 993 suicide decedents aged 18 years and older from the 2005-2010 National Violent Death Reporting System database. Multinomial logistic regressions examined associations of method with alcohol use defined by blood alcohol content. Two-way interactions tested the effects of age, gender, and race/ethnicity on the associations between alcohol use and method of suicide. Results. Alcohol was present among decedents who used the 3 leading methods of suicide: firearm (35.0%), hanging (36.8%), and poisoning (32.7%). Two-way interaction tests suggested that in young and middle adulthood, individuals were more likely to drink alcohol when they used a firearm or hanging (compared with poisoning), but in older adulthood, the reverse was true, with alcohol use more likely with poisoning. Interaction tests also suggested that Asians and Pacific Islanders were most likely to use alcohol in poisonings and that Blacks were least likely to use alcohol in hangings. Conclusions. The results suggested that alcohol use before suicide was influenced by several factors, including age, race/ethnicity, and suicide method.
- Subjects
UNITED States; CAUSES of death; AGE distribution; ALCOHOLISM; ASIANS; ASPHYXIA; BLACK people; COMPARATIVE studies; CONFIDENCE intervals; STATISTICAL correlation; EPIDEMIOLOGY; ETHNIC groups; FIREARMS; POISONING; RACE; RESEARCH funding; SEX distribution; SUICIDE; DEATH certificates; DATA analysis; MULTIPLE regression analysis; PREDICTIVE validity; DISEASE prevalence; RETROSPECTIVE studies; DESCRIPTIVE statistics
- Publication
American Journal of Public Health, 2014, Vol 104, Issue 1, p171
- ISSN
0090-0036
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.2105/AJPH.2013.301352