States' COVID-19 policy contexts and suicide rates among US working-age adults.

Health affairs scholar Pub Date : 2025-03-15 eCollection Date: 2025-03-01 DOI:10.1093/haschl/qxaf024
Emily E Wiemers, Shannon M Monnat, Douglas A Wolf, Jennifer Karas Montez, Joshua Grove, Iliya Gutin, Elyse Grossman
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Abstract

Despite expectations that suicide rates would surge during the pandemic, the national suicide rate declined in the United States in 2020 before returning to pre-pandemic levels in 2021. Explanations of the decline in suicides at the national level include a "pulling-together effect" in the face of a crisis and a shorter than expected pandemic recession. However, suicide rates and the change over time in suicide rates vary substantially across US states. At various times during the pandemic states enacted physical-distancing and economic support policies that may have affected suicide rates. We examined the association between state-level physical-distancing and economic support policy contexts and suicide rates among US adults ages 25-64 years during the COVID-19 pandemic. We found that a 1-SD increase in the stringency of a state's physical-distancing policies was associated with a 5.3% reduction in male suicide rates but was not associated with female suicide rates. Economic support policies were not associated with suicide rates for the period as a whole. The results support the growing evidence that COVID-19 policies had indirect and unintended consequences beyond their direct effect on COVID-19 transmission and death, in this case to reduce suicides among working-age males.

各州COVID-19政策背景和美国工作年龄成年人的自杀率。
尽管人们预计自杀率会在疫情期间飙升,但美国的全国自杀率在2020年下降,并在2021年恢复到疫情前的水平。对国家层面自杀率下降的解释包括:面对危机时的“齐心协力效应”,以及比预期更短的大流行衰退。然而,美国各州的自杀率和自杀率随时间的变化差异很大。在大流行期间的不同时期,各国制定了可能影响自杀率的保持身体距离和经济支持政策。我们研究了COVID-19大流行期间25-64岁美国成年人的州级身体距离和经济支持政策背景与自杀率之间的关系。我们发现,一个州身体距离政策的严格程度每增加1个标准差,男性自杀率就会降低5.3%,但与女性自杀率无关。在整个时期,经济支持政策与自杀率没有关联。研究结果支持了越来越多的证据,即COVID-19政策除了对COVID-19传播和死亡产生直接影响之外,还产生了间接和意想不到的后果,在这种情况下是减少工作年龄男性的自杀行为。
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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