© 2003 American Public Health Association
Kenneth R. Conner and Yeates Conwell are with the University of Rochester Medical Center, Department of Psychiatry, Center for the Study and Prevention of Suicide, Rochester, NY. John Langley is with the Injury Prevention Research Unit, Dunedin School of Medicine, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand. Kenneth J. Tomaszewski is with the Department of Community and Preventive Medicine, University of Rochester Medical Center. Correspondence: Requests for reprints should be sent to Kenneth R. Conner, PsyD, Department of Psychiatry, University of Rochester Medical Center, 300 Crittenden Blvd, Rochester, NY 14642 (e-mail: kenneth_conner{at}urmc.rochester.edu).
Objectives. Risks for suicide and nonfatal self-injury hospitalizations associated with previous injury hospitalizations were investigated in a nationwide retrospective cohort study conducted in New Zealand. Methods. Linked data from all New Zealand public hospitals were used to identify individuals with injury hospitalizations. Participants were followed for 12 months. Results. Significantly increased age- and sex-adjusted relative risks for suicide were associated with previous hospitalization for self-injury, injuries of undetermined causes, and assault. Also, elevated risks were associated with these causes of hospitalization in the case of subsequent self-injury hospitalizations. Conclusions. Results indicate that identifiable subgroups of individuals hospitalized for injuries are at marked risk for serious suicidal behavior and suggest the potential of targeted suicide prevention for these individuals.
Research has identified several major risk factors for suicide1 and medically serious self-harm.2 The health care system is a critical setting for suicide prevention; studies of suicide decedents indicate that between 34% and 76% of these individuals see a primary care physician in the last month of their life.3 Moreover, research has shown increased numbers of psychiatric and medical hospitalizations among suicide victims in the last year of their life.4 It is unknown whether there are also increases in other aspects of health care use, such as injury hospitalizations. Injury hospitalizations confer risk for subsequent injury hospitalizations5 and may express a chronic risk for exposure to trauma.6 However, much of the research in this area has focused on assaultive injury,5,7 particularly among adolescents and young adults.7 Data on previous injury hospitalizations and suicide are more limited. A US study8 involving individuals aged 16 to 35 years revealed that suicide decedents, relative to age- and sex-matched controls, exhibited increased odds of previous hospitalizations owing to suicide attempts (odds ratio [OR] = 56.0), unintentional injuries (OR = 5.0), and assaults (OR = 4.5). A controlled study conducted in Sweden6 that examined treatment patterns during 20 years revealed increased rates of self-inflicted injuries and suicide among individuals who experienced firearm injuries. In the present study, we investigated a nationwide retrospective cohort of individuals residing in New Zealand to determine whether hospitalizations for assaultive injuries, unintentional injuries, and injuries with undetermined causes conferred risks for subsequent self-injury hospitalizations and suicide. We presumed that elevated risks would be associated with previous self-injury hospitalizations. We also examined age, race/ethnicity, and sex patterns.
Data on injury hospitalization exposures and subsequent self-injury hospitalizations were obtained from the New Zealand National Minimum Dataset (NMDS), a single integrated collection of secondary and tertiary health data maintained by the New Zealand Health Information Service (NZHIS). The NMDS was developed in consultation with health sector representatives to inform health care policy, monitor and evaluate policy implementation, perform monitoring and evaluation, measure health status, and meet international requirements. Information about all outpatients and inpatients discharged from public hospitals is supplied directly to the NMDS via hospital-based computer systems. We excluded outpatients from our analyses because the changes in reporting policies regarding these patients that have occurred over time were likely to introduce bias. The data supplied to NMDS include information on diagnoses, diagnostic and therapeutic procedures, and demographic characteristics. In the case of all injury and poisoning diagnoses, circumstances of injury were classified according to International Classification of Diseases, 9th Revision, Clinical Modification (ICD-9-CM) external causes of injury and poisoning codes (E codes) and nature of injury codes.9 Because private hospitals do not consistently use E code discharge data, we analyzed public hospital discharges. This introduced minimal bias, because the vast majority of individuals injured and requiring acute inpatient treatment in New Zealand are admitted to public hospitals.10 In recent years, the private sector has played an increasing role in the delivery of inpatient health services, but the most recent statistics from NZHIS suggest that service delivery in regard to acute management of injuries requiring inpatient treatment has remained unchanged.11 New Zealand national mortality data from 1997 and 1998 were used to determine suicide outcomes. These data, also obtained from NZHIS, involved the same personal identification and coding information as the hospitalization data, so we were able to determine whether a patient hospitalized in 1997 subsequently died in 1997 or 1998. E codes allowed us to determine causes of death.
Definitions of Exposure and Nonexposure New Zealands health information records capture nearly all hospitalizations that occur throughout the country.10 Given the small percentage of the exposure group (1.3%) relative to the overall population of New Zealand, the characteristics of the entire population were considered to be the same as those of the unexposed population. Therefore, the unexposed group was defined through the use of census data.12
Outcomes and Follow-Up
Stratification and Variable Definitions
Data Analysis
Characteristics of exposed and nonexposed participants stratified by sex, age, and race/ethnicity are presented in Table 1
Relative risks for self-injury hospitalizations and suicide associated with previous hospitalizations stratified by sex (adjusted for age) and race/ethnicity (adjusted for age and sex) were also calculated (data not shown). This analysis produced only 2 statistically significant findings: risks for nonfatal self-injury hospitalizations associated with previous self-injury hospitalizations were higher for women than for men (RR = 1.7; 95% CI = 1.3, 2.2), and such risks were lower for Pacific Islanders than for members of the "other" race/ethnicity category (RR = 0.2; 95% CI = 0.1, 0.3).
Self-Injury Exposure Previous studies examining increased risks for suicidal behavior associated with previous suicide attempts have defined previous attempts broadly and examined risks for suicidal behavior associated with a lifetime history of attempts.2 Limiting the exposure period and restricting the definition of suicidal behavior to acts necessitating hospitalization provided unique data about 1-year risks for medically serious suicidal behavior associated with nonsuperficial self-injuries. Research on risk of suicidal behavior associated with previous attempts has also often been limited by a reliance on proxy reports and self-reports of previous suicidal behavior, which may be prone to retrospective biases.14 Our use of a national database obviated this problem. Although elevated risks were expected, the huge relative risks for suicide (105.4) and nonfatal self-injury hospitalizations (175.7) associated with previous self-injury hospitalizations are alarming. Individuals hospitalized after acts of self-harm require aggressive follow-up.
Assaultive Injury Exposure
Undetermined-Cause Injury Exposure
Relative risks for suicide and self-injury hospitalization associated with unintentional injury did not approach the magnitude of the other injury exposures. Suicide prevention efforts targeted toward individuals exposed to unintentional injuries may have little impact on prevention of serious suicidal behavior. In contrast, the very high relative risks for suicidal behavior associated with self-inflicted injuries and injuries of undetermined cause demand the development and assessment of suicide prevention strategies aimed at all such patients. Moreover, as demonstrated in this study, morbidity and mortality rates are high among persons exposed to assault, because these individuals are prone to subsequent assaults5,7 as well as other causes of injury and death, including self-harm. Therefore, rigorous injury prevention efforts targeted toward assaultive injury patients are needed and should include a focus on suicide prevention. Limitations of this study included the potential for misclassification of injury exposures and misclassification of subsequent suicide and self-injury hospitalization. There may have been significant underreporting of self-harm in the hospital data. In addition, information on other important characteristics of exposed participants (e.g., socioeconomic status, marital status, psychiatric diagnoses) was unavailable. Intent and medical lethality of suicidal behavior are correlated highly but not perfectly; thus, the choice to limit the measure of suicidal behavior to that resulting in hospitalization or death served to exclude some individuals committing acts of self-harm with the intent to die. In the United States, unlike New Zealand, firearms are the most common cause of fatal assaultive injuries21 and suicides,22 and the way in which the greater availability of firearms in the United States may affect the injury exposuresuicide relationship is unclear. There are also important racial and ethnic differences between these 2 countries. Still, the United States and New Zealand both have advanced health care systems, and a majority of their citizens are of European descent. Therefore, our findings are expected to generalize to a large degree to the US population. This study provides data on risks for subsequent suicide and nonfatal self-injury hospitalizations associated with previous injury hospitalizations. Although there have been exceptions,2 few previous studies have included information on risk factors for both suicide and medically serious suicide attempts, and indeed the population of suicide attempters has been sorely underinvestigated. The present results indicate that identifiable subgroups of individuals hospitalized for injuries are at marked risk for serious suicidal behavior and illustrate the critical need for implementation and evaluation of targeted suicide prevention efforts aimed at these individuals.
This research was supported by National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism grants K23 AA00318-02 and R03 AA1330001 (Kenneth R. Conner) and National Institute of Mental Health grants RO1 MH54682, K24 MH01759, and T32 MH20061-01 (Yeates Conwell). The Injury Prevention Research Unit of the University of Otago is funded by the Health Research Council of New Zealand and the Accident Compensation Corporation. We wish to thank Shaun Stephenson for his assistance. Human Participant Protection Secondary data sources were used devoid of personal identifiers; thus, informed consent was not necessary. The study was reviewed by the institutional review board at the University of Rochester, which determined that it met federal and university criteria for exemption.
Note. The views and conclusions offered in this article are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect those of the Health Research Council of New Zealand or the Accident Compensation Corporation. K. R. Conner planned the study and took the lead on article preparation. J. Langley provided the data, contributed to the planning of the study, and assisted in article preparation. K. J. Tomaszewski analyzed the data. Y. Conwell assisted in article preparation. Accepted for publication August 21, 2002.
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