Suicide Among Young Alaska Native Men: Community Risk Factors and Alcohol Control

Indigenous residents of Alaska (Alaska Natives) die by suicide at a rate nearly 4 times the US average and the average for all American Indians and Alaska Natives (AI/ANs).1---3 An astonishing 7% of Alaska respondents to a 2003 international household survey of Arctic Indigenous people indicated tha...

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Main Author: Berman, Matthew
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: American Public Health Association 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11122/3775
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spelling ftunivalaska:oai:scholarworks.alaska.edu:11122/3775 2023-05-15T15:18:32+02:00 Suicide Among Young Alaska Native Men: Community Risk Factors and Alcohol Control Berman, Matthew 2014-04-22 http://hdl.handle.net/11122/3775 en_US eng American Public Health Association Berman, Matthew. (2014) Suicide Among Young Alaska Native Men: Community Risk Factors and Alcohol Control. American Journal of Public Health. http://hdl.handle.net/11122/3775 American Journal of Public Health Suicide -- Alaska Alaska Native -- Mental Health Article 2014 ftunivalaska 2023-02-23T21:36:05Z Indigenous residents of Alaska (Alaska Natives) die by suicide at a rate nearly 4 times the US average and the average for all American Indians and Alaska Natives (AI/ANs).1---3 An astonishing 7% of Alaska respondents to a 2003 international household survey of Arctic Indigenous people indicated that they had seriously contemplated suicide within the past year.4 Studies have shown that alcohol is directly or indirectly involved in most of these deaths.5---9 Although Alaska Natives have encountered alcohol for well over a century, the high suicide risk is an entrenched but comparatively recent phenomenon affecting only the past 2 generations.9,10 Figure 1 shows that crude suicide rates for this group rose rapidly in the decade after Alaska achieved statehood in 1959. The 3-year moving average rate peaked at more than 50 per 100 000 in the early 1980s, before declining to a level of about 40 per 100 000 during the past decade. The dip in suicide rates in the late 1970s likely represents faulty data rather than a real departure from the secular trend.11 An emerging new pattern of risk drove the increase in suicide rates in the 1960s. Higher suicide rates among young men led the rise in suicide as a whole.9,12,13 More recently, another important pattern of differential risk emerged as more Alaska Natives moved to the state’s growing urban areas in search of jobs. Suicide rates among Alaska Native residents remaining in small rural communities are more than twice as high as those among Native residents of urban areas and vary greatly among communities even in the same region (Alaska Bureau of Vital Statistics, unpublished data).13 In fact, suicide rates may have declined since the peak in the 1980s (Figure 1) only because the lower risk population of urbandwelling Alaska Natives has grown relative to the more vulnerable rural population. The large disparities among populations with similar ethnicity and histories suggest that the elevated suicide risk is not simply an unfortunate side effect of rapid social change ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Alaska University of Alaska: ScholarWorks@UA Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection University of Alaska: ScholarWorks@UA
op_collection_id ftunivalaska
language English
topic Suicide -- Alaska
Alaska Native -- Mental Health
spellingShingle Suicide -- Alaska
Alaska Native -- Mental Health
Berman, Matthew
Suicide Among Young Alaska Native Men: Community Risk Factors and Alcohol Control
topic_facet Suicide -- Alaska
Alaska Native -- Mental Health
description Indigenous residents of Alaska (Alaska Natives) die by suicide at a rate nearly 4 times the US average and the average for all American Indians and Alaska Natives (AI/ANs).1---3 An astonishing 7% of Alaska respondents to a 2003 international household survey of Arctic Indigenous people indicated that they had seriously contemplated suicide within the past year.4 Studies have shown that alcohol is directly or indirectly involved in most of these deaths.5---9 Although Alaska Natives have encountered alcohol for well over a century, the high suicide risk is an entrenched but comparatively recent phenomenon affecting only the past 2 generations.9,10 Figure 1 shows that crude suicide rates for this group rose rapidly in the decade after Alaska achieved statehood in 1959. The 3-year moving average rate peaked at more than 50 per 100 000 in the early 1980s, before declining to a level of about 40 per 100 000 during the past decade. The dip in suicide rates in the late 1970s likely represents faulty data rather than a real departure from the secular trend.11 An emerging new pattern of risk drove the increase in suicide rates in the 1960s. Higher suicide rates among young men led the rise in suicide as a whole.9,12,13 More recently, another important pattern of differential risk emerged as more Alaska Natives moved to the state’s growing urban areas in search of jobs. Suicide rates among Alaska Native residents remaining in small rural communities are more than twice as high as those among Native residents of urban areas and vary greatly among communities even in the same region (Alaska Bureau of Vital Statistics, unpublished data).13 In fact, suicide rates may have declined since the peak in the 1980s (Figure 1) only because the lower risk population of urbandwelling Alaska Natives has grown relative to the more vulnerable rural population. The large disparities among populations with similar ethnicity and histories suggest that the elevated suicide risk is not simply an unfortunate side effect of rapid social change ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Berman, Matthew
author_facet Berman, Matthew
author_sort Berman, Matthew
title Suicide Among Young Alaska Native Men: Community Risk Factors and Alcohol Control
title_short Suicide Among Young Alaska Native Men: Community Risk Factors and Alcohol Control
title_full Suicide Among Young Alaska Native Men: Community Risk Factors and Alcohol Control
title_fullStr Suicide Among Young Alaska Native Men: Community Risk Factors and Alcohol Control
title_full_unstemmed Suicide Among Young Alaska Native Men: Community Risk Factors and Alcohol Control
title_sort suicide among young alaska native men: community risk factors and alcohol control
publisher American Public Health Association
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/11122/3775
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
Alaska
genre_facet Arctic
Alaska
op_source American Journal of Public Health
op_relation Berman, Matthew. (2014) Suicide Among Young Alaska Native Men: Community Risk Factors and Alcohol Control. American Journal of Public Health.
http://hdl.handle.net/11122/3775
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