自杀:迪尔凯姆视角下的问题重构

S. Pridmore
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The first was an increase during the Great Depression of the 1930s, the second was a reduction in the male suicide rate during World War II (WWII) and the third was a spike during the 1960s and early 1970s, which was attributed to barbiturate access (Harrison and Henley, 2014). The increase in suicide during the Great Depression fits with sociological theory – the loss of resources leads to unemployment, poverty, family breakdown and loss of self-esteem. The individual is no longer adequately supported by (integrated into) society and the suicide rate increases. The decrease in suicide in Australia during WWII is consistent with decreases reported with most wars – there is a common enemy, a pulling together and greater integration of members of society – in the case of losses, grieving families receive private and public condolences and recognition. The increased rate of suicide in ‘the sixties’ (which extended into the first half of the next decade) is not adequately explained by the availability of barbiturates (which relates to method) and sociological factors (motivation/ triggers) have been overlooked. The barbiturates had been continuously available following WWII. In 1960, chlordiazepoxide (benzodiazepine) was released (soon followed by diazepam), reducing the clinical need for barbiturates, and by 1967, strict limitations on the prescription of barbiturates had been imposed. Per suasively, during this period, death by exposure to gas markedly increased (Figure 7.1) and death by jumping doubled from 1964 to 1974 (Figure 8.2) – this was a time of increased suicide. At the zenith, barbiturates accounted for only 18% of female suicide, and while this was achieved after some years of increases, it was nevertheless a relatively small contribution to the total female suicide rate. Access to means is a piece of the suicide puzzle, and the dangers of barbiturates may have been underestimated, but they were not the ‘cause’ of the increased suicide rate in the ‘the sixties’. Durkheim (1952 [1897]: 116) stated the suicide rate could rise in the setting of an ‘unpopular’ war – one which divided groups and families. During the Vietnam War (after preparation) troops went overseas in 1962, with the last returning in 1972. This was an unpopular war – not uncommonly, one brother marched in support of Australia’s involvement while another marched in a ‘moratorium’ (anti-war) protest. Returning soldiers were not welcomed in the usual celebratory manner. I was standing a couple of metres away in Melbourne in 1966 when the limousine of the US President LBJ was splattered with yellow paint – a unique response by Australians to the visiting head of state of an allied nation. Although ‘the sixties’ in Australia are supposed to have been a time of joy and optimism – this was also a time of uncertainty and great social change – Aboriginal rights, second wave feminism, affordable fashion, the contraceptive pill and ‘Pot’ and other illegal drugs were the fuel of a robust counter-culture. The term/ concept ‘generation gap’ appeared in 1962 to identify generational differences and survived for more than a decade. In addition to war and conflicting pacifism, this was the era of ‘free-love’ and co-habitation without marriage. Germaine Greer’s highly commended ‘The Female Eunuch’ influenced attitudes around the world (not just at home). Young women raised in the conservative 1940s and 1950s were challenged by their sudden ‘liberation’ and expected to cast aside their ‘sexual inhibitions’. 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The individual is no longer adequately supported by (integrated into) society and the suicide rate increases. The decrease in suicide in Australia during WWII is consistent with decreases reported with most wars – there is a common enemy, a pulling together and greater integration of members of society – in the case of losses, grieving families receive private and public condolences and recognition. The increased rate of suicide in ‘the sixties’ (which extended into the first half of the next decade) is not adequately explained by the availability of barbiturates (which relates to method) and sociological factors (motivation/ triggers) have been overlooked. The barbiturates had been continuously available following WWII. In 1960, chlordiazepoxide (benzodiazepine) was released (soon followed by diazepam), reducing the clinical need for barbiturates, and by 1967, strict limitations on the prescription of barbiturates had been imposed. Per suasively, during this period, death by exposure to gas markedly increased (Figure 7.1) and death by jumping doubled from 1964 to 1974 (Figure 8.2) – this was a time of increased suicide. At the zenith, barbiturates accounted for only 18% of female suicide, and while this was achieved after some years of increases, it was nevertheless a relatively small contribution to the total female suicide rate. Access to means is a piece of the suicide puzzle, and the dangers of barbiturates may have been underestimated, but they were not the ‘cause’ of the increased suicide rate in the ‘the sixties’. Durkheim (1952 [1897]: 116) stated the suicide rate could rise in the setting of an ‘unpopular’ war – one which divided groups and families. During the Vietnam War (after preparation) troops went overseas in 1962, with the last returning in 1972. 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引用次数: 1

摘要

Jorm教授(2019)最近证明,增加自杀预防计划和心理健康服务的资金对澳大利亚的自杀率没有影响。事实上,在过去的十年里,全国的失业率是逐渐上升的。Bastiampillai教授等人(2020)对此做出了回应,认为目前对(自杀)问题的“看法、信念和理解可能需要重新审视”。他们提出了迪尔凯姆(1952[1897])提出的概念——简而言之,自杀受到一个群体的文化(规范和价值观)、他们的习俗(应对环境的方式)和外部因素施加的干扰的影响。他们认为迪尔凯姆的概念解释了1921年至2017年澳大利亚自杀率的变化(Harrison and Henley, 2014)。他们描述了总自杀率偏离平均水平的三个时期。第一次是20世纪30年代大萧条期间自杀率的上升,第二次是第二次世界大战期间男性自杀率的下降,第三次是20世纪60年代和70年代初的高峰,这归因于巴比妥酸盐的使用(Harrison和Henley, 2014)。大萧条时期自杀率的上升符合社会学理论——资源的丧失导致失业、贫困、家庭破裂和自尊的丧失。个人不再得到(融入)社会的充分支持,自杀率上升。第二次世界大战期间澳大利亚自杀率的下降与大多数战争中自杀率的下降是一致的——有一个共同的敌人,社会成员齐心协力,更大程度地融合在一起——在失去亲人的情况下,悲伤的家庭得到了私人和公共的哀悼和认可。“六十年代”自杀率的上升(一直延续到下一个十年的前五年)并没有充分解释巴比妥类药物的可用性(这与方法有关)和社会学因素(动机/触发因素)被忽视。巴比妥酸盐在二战后一直可以买到。1960年,氯二氮环氧化物(苯二氮卓)被释放(很快地西泮也被释放),减少了临床对巴比妥类药物的需求,到1967年,巴比妥类药物的处方被严格限制。在此期间,毒气致死人数显著增加(图7.1),跳楼致死人数从1964年至1974年增加了一倍(图8.2),这是自杀率上升的时期。在鼎盛时期,巴比妥类药物仅占女性自杀的18%,虽然这是在几年的增长之后实现的,但它对女性自杀率的贡献相对较小。获取手段是自杀之谜的一部分,巴比妥类药物的危险可能被低估了,但它们并不是“60年代”自杀率上升的“原因”。迪尔凯姆(1952[1897]:116)指出,在一场“不受欢迎”的战争中,自杀率可能会上升——一场使群体和家庭分裂的战争。在越南战争期间(经过准备),军队于1962年前往海外,最后一次回国是在1972年。这是一场不受欢迎的战争——并不罕见,一个兄弟游行支持澳大利亚的参与,而另一个兄弟游行进行“暂停”(反战)抗议。回国的士兵没有受到通常的庆祝方式的欢迎。1966年,我在墨尔本站在几米远的地方,当时美国总统约翰逊的豪华轿车被泼了黄漆——这是澳大利亚人对来访的盟国国家元首的独特回应。虽然“六十年代”在澳大利亚应该是一个快乐和乐观的时代,但这也是一个充满不确定性和巨大社会变革的时代,土著权利,第二波女权主义,负担得起的时尚,避孕药,“大麻”和其他非法毒品是强大的反文化的燃料。“代沟”这个术语/概念出现于1962年,用来指代际差异,并存在了十多年。除了战争和冲突的和平主义,这是一个“自由恋爱”和不结婚同居的时代。杰曼·格里尔(Germaine Greer)备受赞誉的《女太监》(The Female Eunuch)影响了全世界(不仅仅是在国内)的态度。在保守的20世纪40年代和50年代长大的年轻女性面临着突然“解放”的挑战,她们被期望抛弃“性禁忌”。年轻的男人有评论
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Suicide: Reframing the problem from the perspective of Durkheim
Professor Jorm (2019) recently demonstrated that increasing funding for suicide prevention programmes and mental health services made no impact on the suicide rate in Australia. In fact, the national rate has risen gradually over the last decade. Professor Bastiampillai et al. (2020) responded, suggesting current ‘perceptions, beliefs and understanding of the problem’ (of suicide) ‘might need to be re-examined’. They suggested the concepts advanced by Durkheim (1952 [1897]) – in brief, that suicide is influenced by the culture (norms and values) of a group, their customs (ways of responding to circumstances) and disruptions imposed by external factors. They argued Durkheim’s concepts explained variations in the Australian suicide rate from 1921 to 2017 (Harrison and Henley, 2014). They described three periods of deviation from the mean total suicide rate. The first was an increase during the Great Depression of the 1930s, the second was a reduction in the male suicide rate during World War II (WWII) and the third was a spike during the 1960s and early 1970s, which was attributed to barbiturate access (Harrison and Henley, 2014). The increase in suicide during the Great Depression fits with sociological theory – the loss of resources leads to unemployment, poverty, family breakdown and loss of self-esteem. The individual is no longer adequately supported by (integrated into) society and the suicide rate increases. The decrease in suicide in Australia during WWII is consistent with decreases reported with most wars – there is a common enemy, a pulling together and greater integration of members of society – in the case of losses, grieving families receive private and public condolences and recognition. The increased rate of suicide in ‘the sixties’ (which extended into the first half of the next decade) is not adequately explained by the availability of barbiturates (which relates to method) and sociological factors (motivation/ triggers) have been overlooked. The barbiturates had been continuously available following WWII. In 1960, chlordiazepoxide (benzodiazepine) was released (soon followed by diazepam), reducing the clinical need for barbiturates, and by 1967, strict limitations on the prescription of barbiturates had been imposed. Per suasively, during this period, death by exposure to gas markedly increased (Figure 7.1) and death by jumping doubled from 1964 to 1974 (Figure 8.2) – this was a time of increased suicide. At the zenith, barbiturates accounted for only 18% of female suicide, and while this was achieved after some years of increases, it was nevertheless a relatively small contribution to the total female suicide rate. Access to means is a piece of the suicide puzzle, and the dangers of barbiturates may have been underestimated, but they were not the ‘cause’ of the increased suicide rate in the ‘the sixties’. Durkheim (1952 [1897]: 116) stated the suicide rate could rise in the setting of an ‘unpopular’ war – one which divided groups and families. During the Vietnam War (after preparation) troops went overseas in 1962, with the last returning in 1972. This was an unpopular war – not uncommonly, one brother marched in support of Australia’s involvement while another marched in a ‘moratorium’ (anti-war) protest. Returning soldiers were not welcomed in the usual celebratory manner. I was standing a couple of metres away in Melbourne in 1966 when the limousine of the US President LBJ was splattered with yellow paint – a unique response by Australians to the visiting head of state of an allied nation. Although ‘the sixties’ in Australia are supposed to have been a time of joy and optimism – this was also a time of uncertainty and great social change – Aboriginal rights, second wave feminism, affordable fashion, the contraceptive pill and ‘Pot’ and other illegal drugs were the fuel of a robust counter-culture. The term/ concept ‘generation gap’ appeared in 1962 to identify generational differences and survived for more than a decade. In addition to war and conflicting pacifism, this was the era of ‘free-love’ and co-habitation without marriage. Germaine Greer’s highly commended ‘The Female Eunuch’ influenced attitudes around the world (not just at home). Young women raised in the conservative 1940s and 1950s were challenged by their sudden ‘liberation’ and expected to cast aside their ‘sexual inhibitions’. Young men had Commentaries 883029 ANP ANZJP CorrespondenceANZJP Correspondence
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