Suicide deaths associated with climate change-induced heat anomalies in Australia: a time series regression analysis.

0 PSYCHIATRY
Lucas Hertzog, Fiona Charlson, Petra Tschakert, Geoffrey G Morgan, Richard Norman, Gavin Pereira, Ivan C Hanigan
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Abstract

Background: Although environmental determinants play an important role in suicide mortality, the quantitative influence of climate change-induced heat anomalies on suicide deaths remains relatively underexamined.

Objective: The objective is to quantify the impact of climate change-induced heat anomalies on suicide deaths in Australia from 2000 to 2019.

Methods: A time series regression analysis using a generalised additive model was employed to explore the potentially non-linear relationship between temperature anomalies and suicide, incorporating structural variables such as sex, age, season and geographic region. Suicide deaths data were obtained from the Australian National Mortality Database, and gridded climate data of gridded surface temperatures were sourced from the Australian Gridded Climate Dataset.

Findings: Heat anomalies in the study period were between 0.02°C and 2.2°C hotter than the historical period due to climate change. Our analysis revealed that approximately 0.5% (264 suicides, 95% CI 257 to 271) of the total 50 733 suicides within the study period were attributable to climate change-induced heat anomalies. Death counts associated with heat anomalies were statistically significant (p value 0.03) among men aged 55+ years old. Seasonality was a significant factor, with increased deaths during spring and summer. The relationship between high heat anomalies and suicide deaths varied across different demographic segments.

Conclusions and implications: This study highlights the measurable impact of climate change-induced heat anomalies on suicide deaths in Australia, emphasising the need for increased climate change mitigation and adaptation strategies in public health planning and suicide prevention efforts focusing on older adult men. The findings underscore the importance of considering environmental factors in addition to individual-level factors in understanding and reducing suicide mortality.

澳大利亚与气候变化引起的高温异常有关的自杀死亡:时间序列回归分析。
背景:尽管环境决定因素在自杀死亡率中起着重要作用,但气候变化引起的热异常对自杀死亡的定量影响仍相对不足:目的:量化2000年至2019年气候变化诱发的高温异常对澳大利亚自杀死亡人数的影响:方法:采用广义加法模型进行时间序列回归分析,探讨气温异常与自杀之间的潜在非线性关系,并纳入性别、年龄、季节和地理区域等结构变量。自杀死亡数据来自澳大利亚国家死亡率数据库,网格地表温度的网格气候数据来自澳大利亚网格气候数据集:由于气候变化,研究期间的高温异常值比历史同期高出 0.02°C 至 2.2°C。我们的分析显示,在研究期间发生的总共 50 733 起自杀事件中,约有 0.5%(264 起,95% CI 257 至 271)可归因于气候变化引起的高温异常。在 55 岁以上的男性中,与高温异常有关的死亡人数具有显著的统计学意义(P 值为 0.03)。季节性是一个重要因素,春季和夏季死亡人数增加。高温异常与自杀死亡之间的关系在不同人群中存在差异:这项研究强调了气候变化引起的高温异常对澳大利亚自杀死亡人数的可测量影响,强调在公共卫生规划和自杀预防工作中需要加强气候变化减缓和适应战略,重点关注老年男性。研究结果强调,在了解和降低自杀死亡率时,除了考虑个人因素外,还必须考虑环境因素。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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CiteScore
6.80
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