Are left-behind families of migrant workers at increased risk of attempted suicide? – a cohort study of 178,000+ individuals in Sri Lanka
Posted on 2019-01-15 - 05:00
Abstract Background There are an estimated 258 million international migrants worldwide. In Asia low-skilled workers often emigrate on a temporary basis (2–3 years) without their families. There is significant concern over the mental health and wellbeing of left-behind families in this region. No previous study has examined whether the risk of suicidal behaviour is elevated in left-behind family members. Methods Cohort study using baseline data from a large randomised controlled trial in Sri Lanka (n = 178,730 participants; 8% households had a current temporary foreign migrant) and prospective hospital presentations of suicide attempts. Using multilevel Poisson regression models, we compared the risk of attempted suicide in households with left-behind and non-left-behind family members. We also investigated whether the sex of the migrant or the age/sex of the household member left behind altered any associations. Results The risk of an attempted suicide was elevated in female migrant households (IRR 1.60 95% CI 1.38, 1.85), but not male migrant households (IRR 1.01 95% CI 0.76,1.36)) with strong evidence that risk differed for female vs. male migrant households (p-value = 0.005). We found no evidence that the age or sex of the left-behind household member altered the association observed. Conclusions This analysis suggests that members of households with a temporary female foreign migrant are at an increased risk of attempted suicide, but these findings must be interpreted with caution. The increased risk of suicidal behaviour in these households may be due to factors that were present before the migration and persist post-migration (e.g. household violence, poverty).
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Knipe, Duleeka; Lambert, Helen; Pearson, Melissa; Eddleston, Michael; Jayamanne, Shaluka; Wickramage, Kolitha; et al. (2019). Are left-behind families of migrant workers at increased risk of attempted suicide? – a cohort study of 178,000+ individuals in Sri Lanka. figshare. Collection. https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.c.4368215.v1
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AUTHORS (10)
DK
Duleeka Knipe
HL
Helen Lambert
MP
Melissa Pearson
ME
Michael Eddleston
SJ
Shaluka Jayamanne
KW
Kolitha Wickramage
KH
Keith Hawton
FK
Flemming Konradsen
CM
Chris Metcalfe
DG
David Gunnell