Login / Signup

A comparison of farming- and non-farming-related suicides from the United States' National Violent Deaths Reporting System, 2003-2016.

Alison J KennedyJulie CerelAthena KheibariStuart LeskeJames Watts
Published in: Suicide & life-threatening behavior (2021)
Farmers are at higher risk of suicide than other occupations and the general population. The complex suicide risk factors have not been examined in a large, population-wide study across a significant time period. This observational study draws on existing data from the United States' National Violent Death Reporting System (NVDRS), including 140,523 farming- or non-farming-related suicide decedents between 2003 and 2016 from across 40 states. "Farming-related" decedents included 2,801 suicides. Farmers had higher odds of being male, older, less well-educated, and American Indian/Alaska Native. Farmers had higher odds of using firearms and-when farmers used a gun-higher odds of using a long-arm weapon. Farmers had lower odds of having a known mental health condition or job problem, and lower odds of having made a previous suicide attempt or leaving a suicide note. Findings highlight the complexity of suicide risk within the context of farming in the United States and reinforce the need for tailored prevention efforts; employing means restriction of firearms; and emphasizing that traditional risk factors may not be as common in the farming population.
Keyphrases
  • risk factors
  • mental health
  • quality improvement
  • emergency department
  • physical activity
  • adverse drug
  • machine learning
  • big data
  • depressive symptoms
  • artificial intelligence
  • drug induced
  • smoking cessation