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Journal Article

Citation

Straif-Bourgeois S, Ratard R. J. La. State Med. Soc. 2012; 164(5): 274-6, 279, 281-2.

Affiliation

Infectious Disease Epidemiology Section, Office of Public Health, Louisiana Department of Health and Hospitals, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2012, Louisiana State Medical Society)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

23362593

Abstract

This report is a descriptive study on suicide deaths in Louisiana occurring in the years 1999 to 2010. Mortality data was collected from death certificates from this 12-year period to describe suicide mortality by year, race, sex, age group, and methods of suicide. Data were also compared to national data. Rates and methods used to commit suicide vary greatly according to sex, race, and age. The highest rates were observed in white males, followed by black males, white females, and black females. Older white males had the highest suicide rates. The influence of age was modulated by the sex and race categories. Firearm was the most common method used in all four categories. Other less common methods were hanging/strangulation/suffocation (HSS) and drugs/alcohol. Although no parish-level data were systematically analyzed, a comparison of suicide rates post-Katrina versus pre-Katrina was done for Orleans Parish, the rest of the Greater New Orleans area, and a comparison group. It appears that rates observed among whites, particularly males, were higher after Katrina. Data based on mortality do not give a comprehensive picture of the burden of suicide, and their interpretation should be done with caution.


Language: en

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