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The geography of suicide in older adults in Hong Kong: An ecological study.

Yingqi GuoPatsy P H ChauQingsong ChangJean WooMoses WongPaul Siu-Fai Yip
Published in: International journal of geriatric psychiatry (2019)
Strengthening public services, providing more public spaces and activities, and making good use of the community resources might be key and efficient strategies in elderly suicide prevention in Hong Kong. Key points The spatial variations of elderly suicides in Hong Kong show a much more complicated pattern compared with the simple "inner-city high suicide rate and suburban low" pattern in the Western countries and the "central low suicide rate and peripheral high" pattern in some of the Asian countries. In Hong Kong, suicide rates in the city centers were not higher than the average in the city. Clusters of higher suicide rates were mainly found in the New Territories, which is somewhat disconnected from the city and, in some inner-city neighborhoods, with high-density population. The spatial variations of suicide in the older adults in Hong Kong cannot be explained by the neighborhood Social Vulnerability Index as in the existing literature. Neighborhood service provision such as recreational services, daily necessity resources, and community centers played a significant role in affecting suicides in the older adults in Hong Kong.
Keyphrases
  • healthcare
  • mental health
  • physical activity
  • high density
  • systematic review
  • climate change
  • south africa
  • emergency department
  • middle aged
  • human health