Abstract

Introduction

Little is known regarding how the risk of suicide in refugees relates to their host country. Specifically, to what extent, inter-country differences in structural factors between the host countries may explain the association between refugee status and subsequent suicide is lacking in previous literature.

Objectives

We aimed to investigate the risk of suicide among refugees in Sweden and Norway according to their sex, age, region/country of birth and duration of residence.

Methods

Each suicide case between the age of 18-64 years during 1998 and 2018 (17,572 and 9,443 cases in Sweden and Norway, respectively) was matched with up to 20 population-based controls, by sex and age. Multivariate-adjusted conditional logistic regression models yielding adjusted odds ratios (aORs) with 95% confidence intervals (95% CI) were used to test the association between refugee status and suicide.

Results

The aORs for suicide in refugees in Sweden and Norway were 0.5 (95% CI: 0.5-0.6) and 0.3 (95% CI: 0.3-0.4), compared with the Swedish-born and Norwegian-born individuals, respectively. Stratification by region/country of birth showed similar statistically significant lower odds for most refugee groups in both host countries except for refugees from Eritrea (aOR 1.0, 95% CI: 0.7-1.6) in Sweden. The risk of suicide did not vary much across refugee groups by their duration of residence, sex and age.

Conclusions

The findings of almost similar suicide mortality advantages among refugees in two host countries may suggest that resiliency and culture/religion-bound attitudes could be more influential for suicide risk among refugees than other post-migration environmental and structural factors in the host country.

Disclosure

No significant relationships.

Details

Title
Does country of resettlement influence the risk of suicide in refugees? A case-control study in Sweden and Norway
Author
Amin, R 1 ; Mittendorfer-Rutz, E 1 ; Mehlum, L 2 ; Runeson, B 3 ; Helgesson, M 1 ; Tinghög, P 4 ; Björkenstam, E 1 ; Holmes, E 5 ; Qin, P 2 

 Karolinska Institutet, Clinical Neuroscience, solna, Sweden 
 University of Oslo, National Centre For Suicide Research And Prevention, Oslo, Norway 
 University of Oslo, National Centre For Suicide Research And Prevention, solna, Sweden 
 Swedish Red Cross University College, Health Sciences, Huddinge, Sweden 
 Karolinska Institutet, Division Of Psychology, Department Of Clinical Neuroscience, solna, Sweden 
Pages
S122-S122
Publication year
2022
Publication date
Jun 2022
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
ISSN
09249338
e-ISSN
17783585
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2708691054
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the European Psychiatric Association. This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (the “License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.