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Suicide prevention in low- and middle-income countries: part perceptions, partial solutions

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

K. S. Jacob*
Affiliation:
Department of Psychiatry, Christian Medical College, Vellore 632002, India. Email: ksjacob@cmcvellore.ac.in
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Summary

Suicide, a common cause of death in many low- and middle-income countries, has often been viewed through a medical/psychiatric lens. Such perspectives medicalise social and personal distress and suggest individual and medication-based treatments. This editorial argues for the need to examine suicide from a public health perspective and suggests the need for population-based social and economic interventions.

Type
Editorial
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal College of Psychiatrists 2017 

Background

Suicide has been recognised as a global public health problem. 1 It adversely affects not just those who have taken their own lives but also families, communities and society. Higher rates of suicide in some parts of the world demand strategies tailored to regional contexts. A key objective, for researchers and policy makers, that needs to be addressed is assessing the relative impact of different interventions in reducing population rates of suicide. A secondary one is examining the contribution of specific mental health initiatives in reducing suicide.

Psychiatrists view suicide through a biomedical lens and identify a constellation of symptoms, called depression, commonly seen in people who take their own lives. Whereas psychiatrists insist that simple screening instruments, which count symptoms without context, can identify depression, general practitioners argue that they essentially label people who are distressed because of social circumstances and psychological pressures. Reference Heath2

Identifying risk factors in low- and middle-income countries

Studies on suicide, which employed psychological autopsies, identified mental disorders, particularly major depression, as a major risk factor. Reference Foster, Gillespie and McClelland3 However, recent research from low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) challenges traditional points of view. A systematic review, which examined the association between suicide and poverty in LMICs, documented a positive association. Reference Iemmi, Bantjes, Coast, Channer, Leone and McDaid4 The review also acknowledged a positive association between non-fatal suicidal ideation, behaviours and poverty, and argued for the potential benefit in addressing economic poverty within suicide prevention strategies, with particular attention to both chronic poverty and acute economic events. Reference Iemmi, Bantjes, Coast, Channer, Leone and McDaid4 Studies from India Reference Manoranjitham, Rajkumar, Thangadurai, Prasad, Jayakaran and Jacob5 and from China Reference Zhang, Xiao and Zhou6,Reference Li, Phillips, Zhang, Xu and Yang7 have also shown that the majority of the people who die by suicide are distressed secondary to their psychosocial context and only a small minority have severe mental illness. Poverty, social deprivation and its association with suicide have also been documented in more affluent Asian countries such as Japan Reference Inoue, Fujita, Takeshita, Abe, Fujihara and Ezoe8 and South Korea. Reference Hong and Knapp9 Although people with severe mental illnesses do take their own life, their contribution to population rates is much less significant than that seen in high-income countries. The absence of a social security net, which seems to be crucial in managing psychosocial and economic distress, may explain the differing rates of suicide and the rates of serious mental disorders among those who die by suicide in high-income and emerging economies.

Psychiatrists, using a biomedical formulation, medicalise psychosocial distress and suggest treatments for individuals. Although both medication and psychological interventions have been suggested as solutions, the evidence to support their usefulness in the community and in primary care is contradictory. On one hand, there is evidence to suggest that medication is superior to psychological intervention in primary care, Reference Patel, Chisholm, Rabe-Hesketh, Dias-Saxena, Andrew and Mann10 whereas on the other, antidepressants have been proven not to be useful in less severe depression, Reference Kirsch, Deacon, Huedo-Medina, Scoboria, Moore and Johnson11 commonly prevalent in communities.

The importance of large-scale public health interventions

Nevertheless, there is strong evidence to link physical and mental health to the social and economic environment, and longevity to improved living standards. 12,13 The poor health status of populations in the poorest countries is related to chronic poverty working through lack of basic needs and access to health services, gender and social discrimination, economic insecurity and political exclusion. Suicide, a behaviour, is a final common pathway for a variety of predisposing and precipitating factors. Heterogeneity among people who take their own life and the diversity of their contexts suggests multifactorial aetiologies. The failure to identify specific necessary and sufficient causes argues against single or simple solutions. It calls for a comprehensive package of interventions and multisectoral responses. Reference Jacob14 Medicalising suicide or reducing it to psychiatric labels will prove ineffective.

Historical analysis of suicide data in England and Wales (1863–2007) demonstrates trends, which show much higher rates in the early 20th century particularly during the Great Depression of the 1930s. Reference Thomas and Gunnell15 The steady reduction in rates after the Second World War coincided with the introduction of public health interventions such as social security. Similar reductions have been documented in the USA, Australia and New Zealand. Reference Monk16Reference Deavoll, Mulder, Beutrais and Joyce18 Historical parallels between the reduction in many infectious diseases (such as tuberculosis, cholera) suggest that mortality reduced long before the introduction of specific interventions (i.e. vaccines, antibiotics). Reference McKeown19 The provision of clean water, sanitation, nutrition and housing decreased transmission and significantly contributed to reduction in epidemics and mortality in the West and these occurred before the introduction of specific curative strategies.

Multidimensional phenomena, such as suicide, require large-scale public health interventions to reduce the suicide rates of populations. Many inputs – political, financial, social, cultural, science, engineering, educational, religious and legal, in addition to medical, are required to improve population health. Reference Jacob20 Without such public health approaches, suicide prevention would remain on paper with the psychiatric strategies currently advocated inadequate for the task of reducing suicide rates. Public health in LMICs mistakenly employs urgency-driven curative solutions instead of preventive population health measures. Reference Jacob21

However, the low base rate of suicide makes the task of demonstrating usefulness of interventions difficult, as it requires recruitment of very large population samples followed up over time. Consequently, most studies do not focus on outcome indicators (suicide) but emphasise indicators of process (such as the effect on depression, reduction in treatment gap). Reference Jacob22 Although such shifts in emphasis are pragmatic, they cloud issues related to reducing population suicide rates. Specific disciplinary perspectives tend to identify causal mechanisms operating in a minority of suicides and suggest single and simplistic solutions to manage the complex individual and social phenomenon of suicide. Reducing suicide rates requires comprehensive national responses.

Conclusions

Nevertheless, the biggest challenge for preventing suicides is the ability to scale up interventions to population levels. Many localised projects have succeeded in their objectives because of massive academic, financial, administrative and political commitments. Reference Jacob22 However, most attempts at scaling up of service delivery have failed in LMICs. Whereas individual treatments and psychiatric inputs can prevent suicide in people identified to be at risk, their impact of population rates of suicide is yet to be demonstrated. The reductions in suicide reported in some countries have more to do with secular trends and improvements in living standards than specific suicide prevention programmes. Reference Bellanger, Jourdain and Batt-Moillo23 Although interventions have shown a reduction in method-specific or site-specific rates, there is no firm evidence to suggest an overall reduction in suicide. Social determinants of health and mental health demand public health interventions in order to reduce inequity and provide social justice, which in turn may prevent suicide among vulnerable people.

References

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