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Journal Article

Citation

Shah A, Bhandarkar R. Psychol. Rep. 2008; 103(2): 639-642.

Affiliation

University of Central Lancashire, Preston, United Kingdom. ajit.shah@wlmht.nhs.uk

Copyright

(Copyright © 2008, SAGE Publishing)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

19102492

Abstract

Crime may be associated with a less structured society, less social integration, and feelings of less security and greater distress among citizens, which characteristics may lead to mental illness and subsequent suicide. Therefore, a cross-national analysis examining the association of general population suicide rates with percent of males and females in the population victimised by different categories of crime was undertaken using cross-national data from the World Health Organization and United Nations for 42 countries. Spearman correlations were generally weak and not statistically significant. Those values were at variance with the study's hypothesis and may be explained by several factors, including methodological issues. Individual-level case-control or cohort studies of suicides and attempted suicides in the general population may permit exploration of the relation of general population suicides with experience and percent by nations of being victimised by crime.


Language: en

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