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Copyright Molecular Diversity Preservation International Jan 2013

Abstract

Ecological studies of suicide and self-harm have established the importance of area variables (e.g., deprivation, social fragmentation) in explaining variations in suicide risk. However, there are likely to be unobserved influences on risk, typically spatially clustered, which can be modeled as random effects. Regression impacts may be biased if no account is taken of spatially structured influences on risk. Furthermore a default assumption of linear effects of area variables may also misstate or understate their impact. This paper considers variations in suicide outcomes for small areas across England, and investigates the impact on them of area socio-economic variables, while also investigating potential nonlinearity in their impact and allowing for spatially clustered unobserved factors. The outcomes are self-harm hospitalisations and suicide mortality over 6,781 Middle Level Super Output Areas. [PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]

Details

Title
Assessing the Impact of Socioeconomic Variables on Small Area Variations in Suicide Outcomes in England
Author
Congdon, Peter
Pages
158-77
Section
Article
Publication year
2013
Publication date
Jan 2013
Publisher
MDPI AG
ISSN
1661-7827
e-ISSN
1660-4601
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1316592742
Copyright
Copyright Molecular Diversity Preservation International Jan 2013