Back to Search Start Over

An analysis of age-standardized suicide rates in Muslim-majority countries in 2000-2019.

Authors :
Lew, Bob
Lester, David
Kõlves, Kairi
Yip, Paul S. F.
Chen, Ying-Yeh
Chen, Won Sun
Hasan, M. Tasdik
Koenig, Harold G.
Wang, Zhi Zhong
Fariduddin, Muhamad Nur
Zeyrek-Rios, Emek Yuce
Chan, Caryn Mei Hsien
Mustapha, Feisul
Fitriana, Mimi
Dolo, Housseini
Gönültaş, Burak M.
Dadfar, Mahboubeh
Davoudi, Mojtaba
Abdel-Khalek, Ahmed M.
Chan, Lai Fong
Source :
BMC Public Health; 5/4/2022, Vol. 22 Issue 1, p1-18, 18p, 8 Charts, 1 Graph
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

<bold>Background: </bold>This study examines the 20-year trend of suicide in 46 Muslim-majority countries throughout the world and compares their suicide rates and trends with the global average. Ecological-level associations between the proportion of the Muslim population, the age-standardized suicide rates, male-to-female suicide rate ratio, and the Human Development Index (HDI) in 2019 were examined.<bold>Methods: </bold>Age-standardized suicide rates were extracted from the WHO Global Health Estimates database for the period between 2000 and 2019. The rates in each country were compared with the age-standardized global average during the past 20 years. The countries were further grouped according to their regions/sub-regions to calculate the regional and sub-regional weighted age-standardized suicide rates involving Muslim-majority countries. Correlation analyses were conducted between the proportion of Muslims, age-standardized suicide rate, male: female suicide rate ratio, and the HDI in all countries. Joinpoint regression was used to analyze the age-standardized suicide rates in 2000-2019.<bold>Results: </bold>The 46 countries retained for analysis included an estimated 1.39 billion Muslims from a total worldwide Muslim population of 1.57 billion. Of these countries, eleven (23.9%) had an age-standardized suicide rate above the global average in 2019. In terms of regional/sub-regional suicide rates, Muslim-majority countries in the Sub-Saharan region recorded the highest weighted average age-standardized suicide rate of 10.02/100,000 population, and Southeastern Asia recorded the lowest rate (2.58/100,000 population). There were significant correlations between the Muslim population proportion and male-to-female rate ratios (r=-0.324, p=0.028), HDI index and age-standardized suicide rates (r=-0.506, p<0.001), and HDI index and male-to-female rate ratios (r=0.503, p<0.001) in 2019. Joinpoint analysis revealed that seven Muslim-majority countries (15.2%) recorded an increase in the average annual percentage change regarding age-standardized suicide rates during 2000-2019.<bold>Conclusions: </bold>Most Muslim-majority countries had lower age-standardized suicide rates than the global average, which might reflect religious belief and practice or due to Muslim laws in their judicial and social structure which may lead to underreporting. This finding needs further in-depth country and region-specific study with regard to its implication for public policy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14712458
Volume :
22
Issue :
1
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
BMC Public Health
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
156706112
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-022-13101-3