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Ambient temperature, sunlight duration, and suicide: A systematic review and meta-analysis.

Authors :
Gao, Jiaojiao
Cheng, Qiang
Duan, Jun
Xu, Zihan
Bai, Lijun
Zhang, Yanwu
Zhang, Heng
Wang, Shusi
Zhang, Zhihua
Su, Hong
Source :
Science of the Total Environment. Jan2019, Vol. 646, p1021-1029. 9p.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Abstract Background The relationship between sunlight hours, temperature, and suicide has been investigated in many previous studies, but with inconsistent findings. We conducted this meta-analysis aiming at providing clear evidence about whether sunlight hours and temperature can affect the risk of suicide. Methods Relevant literature published before 7 Jul 2018 was searched in three electronic database of PubMed, Web of science and Cochrane. Between-study heterogeneity in the effect estimates were examined by study design (i.e., exposure time resolution, temperature measure and suicide classification) and population vulnerability (i.e., sex, national income level, climate zone and study location). Results Regarding temperature-suicide association, we identified 14 studies that provided 23 effect estimates for meta-analysis. Our random-effects model showed that each 1 °C increase in temperature was significantly associated with a 1% increase in the incidence of suicide (Incidence Rate Radio (IRR) = 1.01; 95%CI = 1.00–1.02; p < 0.05). As for sunlight duration and suicide, 11 effect estimates from 4 studies were pooled using a fixed-effects model. Significant association between sunlight duration (per 1 h increase) and the risk of suicide was not observed, and the pooled IRR was 1.00 (95%CI = 0.99–1.01; p > 0.05). There was significant heterogeneity between previous studies' effect estimates, and significantly lower heterogeneity was noted for the female group, for studies that did analyses at daily scale, and for studies using mean temperature as the exposure indicator. Conclusion Our findings suggest a significant and positive association between temperature rises and incidence of suicide, and a non-significant association between sunlight duration and incidence of suicide. Populations living in tropical and temperate zones or at middle-income level may be particularly vulnerable to temperature increase. Graphical abstract Unlabelled Image Highlights • Temperature rise increases suicidal risk and current studies don’t support the positive link between sunshine and suicide. • Rising temperature has a greater impact on completed suicide than suicide attempt. • It is more effective to measure the relationship between temperature rise and suicide risk on a daily or weekly time scale. • Populations in tropical and temperate zones or at middle-income countries are particularly vulnerable to temperature rise. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00489697
Volume :
646
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Science of the Total Environment
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
131790454
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2018.07.098