Health
Poor air quality puts men at higher suicide risk
New York, Feb 13
Even short-term exposure to
air pollutants such as nitrogen dioxide and fine particulate matter may
increase the risk for suicide, especially among men between 36 to 64
years of age, says a new study.
Higher levels of pollution might interact with other factors to increase the risk for suicide, the researchers noted.
"We
are not exactly sure why risk of suicide was higher in these two
groups," said Amanda Bakian, assistant professor of psychiatry at
University of Utah.
"We suspect that it might be because these
two groups were either exposed to higher levels of air pollution or that
other additional factors make these two groups more susceptible to the
effects of air pollution," Bakian added.
Bakian examined the
records of more than 1,500 people who died by suicide in Salt Lake
County between Jan 1, 2000, and Dec 31, 2010.
The odds of
completing suicide were 20 percent higher for people exposed to
increased levels of nitrogen dioxide in the two to three days before
their deaths.
Similarly, individuals exposed to high
concentrations of fine particulate matter (PM2.5) in the two to three
days before a suicide experienced five percent higher odds of suicide.
Men
experienced a 25 percent increase in the odds of suicide following
short-term exposure to nitrogen dioxide and a six percent increase in
the odds of suicide following short-term exposure to fine particulate
matter.
In addition, the odds of suicide in people between the
ages of 36 to 64 increased by 20 percent following short-term exposure
to nitrogen dioxide and seven percent following short-term exposure to
fine particulate matter.
The study appeared in the American Journal of Epidemiology.