The British Journal of Psychiatry (2008) 192: 310-311. doi: 10.1192/bjp.bp.107.037697
© 2008 The Royal College of Psychiatrists
Prevalence and correlates of non-fatal suicidal behaviour among South Africans
Sean Joe, PhD, LMSW
School of Social Work and Department of Psychiatry, University of
Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA
Dan J. Stein, MD, PhD
Department of Psychiatry and Mental Health, University of Cape Town, Cape
Town, South Africa
Soraya Seedat, MD
Department of Psychiatry, University of Stellenbosch, Cape Town
Allen Herman, MD, PhD
National School of Public Health, South Africa
David R. Williams, PhD, MPH
School of Public Health, Harvard University, Boston, Massachusetts,
USA
Correspondence:
Dr Sean Joe, School of Social Work, University of Michigan, 1080 South
University Avenue, Room 2780, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109, USA. Email:
sjoe{at}ssw.umich.edu
Declaration of interest
None. Funding detailed in Acknowledgements.
a Since the institutions in South Africa were once controlled along legally
defined racial categories which separated `Blacks' into `Indians', `Coloureds'
and `Africans', their daily experience and consequent psychiatric or physical
health patterns could not be described without recourse to such racial
terminology.1 The
use of these terms in this paper does not imply their legitimacy. 

ABSTRACT
We examined nationally representative data from the 2002–2004
South
Africa Stress and Health Study, a national household
probability sample of
4351 persons aged 18 years and older:
9.1% of respondents reported lifetime
suicide ideation, 3.8%
a plan and 2.9% an attempt. Among four ethnic groups,
the Coloured
a group had the
highest lifetime prevalence for attempts (7.1%).
Those at higher risk of
suicide attempts had one or more DSM–IV
disorders.

INTRODUCTION
Suicide is becoming a worldwide public health
issue.
2,3
Although
there is a wealth of research literature on suicide and non-fatal
suicidal behaviour in high-income
countries,
4–7
information
on the prevalence and trends of suicide and non-fatal suicidal
behaviour in less affluent countries is often scarce. In South
Africa there is
no single primary data source for nationally
representative information on
non-fatal suicide
behaviour.
8 National
estimates of the lifetime prevalence and correlates
of suicide ideation,
planning and attempts among the people
of South Africa, including specific
cultural groups, are reported
here for the first time, using data recently
collected for
the World Health Organization (WHO) World Mental Health
Survey.
9

Method
The South Africa Stress and Health Study (SASH), which collected
data
between January 2002 and June 2004, was a national probability
sample of 4351
adult South Africans living in households or
hostel
quarters.
10 Hostel
quarters were included to maximise
coverage of young working-age men. The
overall response rate
was 85.5%. The Composite International Diagnostic
Interview
(CIDI)
11
version 3.0 was used to assess suicidality (lifetime
ideation, planning and
attempts) and the presence of DSM–IV
diagnosis in four categories:
anxiety, mood, impulse-control
and substance use
disorder.
12 The
translation of the English
version of the CIDI into the six other languages
used in the
SASH was carried out according to WHO recommendations.
All analyses were done using the SAS version 9.1.3 software package.
Discrete-time survival analysis with time-varying covariates was used to study
the risk factors of lifetime suicide ideation, plans and
attempts.13 The
data were weighted to adjust for the stratified multistage sample design,
differential probability of selection within households as a function of
household size and clustering of the data, and for differential non-response.
A post-stratification weight was also used to make the sample distribution
comparable with the population distribution in the 2001 South African census
for age, gender, and province. The weighting and geographic clustering of the
data were taken into account in data analyses by using the jackknife repeated
replications simulation method implemented in an SAS
macro.14 The
survival coefficients were exponentiated and are reported below in the form of
odds ratios.

Results
The estimated lifetime prevalence rates of suicide ideation,
plans and
attempts were 9.1% (s.e.=0.7), 3.8% (s.e.=0.4) and
2.9% (s.e.=0.3)
respectively. There were noticeable gender
differences, with women reporting
twice as many attempts as
men: 3.8% (s.e.=0.5)
v. 1.8% (s.e.=0.3).
The rate of attempted
suicide varied significantly by ethnic group, with the
Coloured
group (of mixed racial origin) reporting levels (7.1%, s.e.=1.3)
that
were markedly higher than that of the White (2.4%, s.e.=0.7),
Black (2.4%,
s.e.=0.3) and Indian groups (2.5%, s.e.=1.6).
There were also ethnic
differences in the conditional probability
of making an attempt among
respondents with suicidal ideation
but no plan. People classified as Black
(5.6%, s.e.=1.5) were
less likely than those in the White (10.0%, s.e.=3.7)
and Indian
(27.0%, s.e.=29.0) groups to engage in impulsive suicide attempts,
whereas those classified as Coloured (33.4%, s.e.=9.6) reported
the highest
level of impulsive suicide attempts.
All of the DSM–IV disorders assessed in SASH were significant risk
factors for a lifetime suicide attempt (Table DS1). Respondents with at least
one DSM–IV disorder were four times (95% CI 2.6–6.2) more likely
to attempt suicide than those with no disorder. However, this result does not
control for the main effects of individual disorders. All four summary
variables for the diagnostic classes (e.g. any mood disorder, any anxiety
disorder) were significantly associated with elevated risks of attempting
suicide (ORs 3.0–4.1). The odds ratios for a substance use disorder
(OR=4.1) increased the risk of a suicide attempt more than for any other
disorder category (ORs 3.0–3.6). Among individual disorders the odds
ratios for panic disorder (OR=8.9), alcohol abuse with dependence (OR=5.9) and
drug use (OR=5.0) were substantially higher than for other disorders,
including depression or post-traumatic stress disorder (ORs
2.9–4.7).
The effects of comorbidity are presented in the final section of the data
supplement table. Respondents with three or more disorders were eight times
more likely to attempt suicide (OR=8.3, 95% CI 4.8–14.2) and to develop
suicidal ideation (OR=8.3, 95% CI 4.3–15.8) than were respondents with
no psychiatric disorder. Having three or more disorders was strongly
associated with a higher risk of suicide attempts through the pathway of
planned attempts (OR=2.9). The risks of attempts and of ideation were greater
for respondents with two or more disorders than for those with no disorder,
and substantially greater than the risks for those with only one disorder.

Discussion
The results reported here are limited by the fact that we do
not know the
extent to which mental health status or ethnic,
cultural and generational
factors affected the willingness
of our respondents to admit or recall the
presence of symptoms
of suicide over their lifetime. There may also be bias
associated
with differential validity of the CIDI for the various ethnic
groups in South Africa. Finally, the SASH is retrospective
and
cross-sectional; thus the prevalence estimates are likely
to be
lower-bound.
4
However, the effect of most of these limitations
would be to make our
estimates of suicide behaviour more conservative
than might be the case.
The 2.9% lifetime prevalence estimate of attempted suicide among the South
African population is close to the rates of 4.6% and 4.1% reported for general
and Black populations respectively in the
USA.5,15
In addition, the 9.1% estimated prevalence of suicide ideation is comparable
with previous estimates from studies using South African clinical
samples.16,17
Reported for the first time are important ethnic differences among South
Africans in the lifetime prevalence of suicide ideation, planning and
attempts. Reasons for the substantially higher risk of attempted suicide and
impulsive attempts among the Coloured group are unclear. `Coloured' identity,
historically and currently, has been fraught with conflict and
contradictions.18,19
Our findings raise the possibility that people classified as Coloured may face
unique stressors in their adjustment to rapid social transformation in a
post-apartheid society. Prior research suggests that political and
socio-economic transitions can adversely affect
health.20,21
The mental health consequences of South Africa's rapid transitions should be
carefully explored in future
research.21,22
The SASH finding that psychiatric comorbidity is a significant predictor of
suicide attempts over and above the effects of individual disorders is
consistent with previous research on adult suicidal
behaviour.4 In our
sample we found that the suicide risks stay relatively constant when one
disorder is present, increase in the presence of two disorders, and increase
markedly for three or more disorders. Overall, these results suggest that
people in South Africa engage in suicidal thought and behaviours at levels
nearly comparable with those of Western nations. The higher rates of attempted
suicide, notably among those categorised as Coloured, should be addressed in
future research and considered by clinicians when screening and treating South
African patients who might be suicidal.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The South Africa Stress and Health study was funded by grant
R01-MH059575
from the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)
and the National Institute
of Drug Abuse, and funding from
the South African Department of Health and the
University of
Michigan. It was carried out in conjunction with the World
Health
Organization World Mental Health (WMH) Survey Initiative. We
thank the
WMH staff for assistance with instrumentation, fieldwork
and data analysis.
These activities were supported by the NIMH
(R01MH070884), the John D. and
Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation,
the Pfizer Foundation, the US Public Health
Service (R13-MH066849,
R01-MH069864, and R01-DA016668), the Fogarty
International
Center (FIRCA R01-TW006481), the Pan American Health
Organization,
Eli Lilly, Ortho-McNeil Pharmaceutical, GlaxoSmithKline and
Bristol-Myers Squibb. S.J. was supported by a grant (K01-MH65499)
from NIMH
and he is with the Program for Research on Black
Americans in the Institute
for Social Research, University
of Michigan.

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Received for publication March 8, 2007.
Revision received June 17, 2007.
Accepted for publication July 13, 2007.