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Health:

Suicide

Definition

The number of suicide deaths per 100,000 population, expressed as a three-year moving average age-standardised rate, for the population aged 5 years and over.

Relevance

Suicide is an indicator of the mental health and social wellbeing of society and a major cause of injury-related death in the population.

Current level and trends

In 2005, 502 people died by suicide, an increase from the 488 people who died in 2004.23 The three-year moving average age-standardised24 suicide death rate was 13.2 per 100,000 population in 2003–2005, compared with 13.1 per 100,000 in 2002–2004. Over the 1980s and 1990s there was an upward trend in the suicide death rate, which reached a peak of 16.3 per 100,000 in 1995–1997 and 1996–1998. The rate for 2003–2005 (13.2 deaths per 100,000 people) was similar to the rate for 1985–1987 (13.1 per 100,000).

Figure H3.1 Age-standardised suicide deathrate, three-year moving average, by sex, 1985–2005

Figure H3.1 Age-standardised suicide deathrate, three-year moving average, by sex, 1985–2004

Source: Ministry of Health, Public Health Intelligence
Notes: (1) The three-year moving average rates are plotted on the mid-point year (eg 2004 is the mid-point year of 2003–2005) (2) 2005 figures are provisional (3) Age-standardised to WHO standard population

Age differences

People aged 25–34 years had the highest three-year moving average suicide death rate in 2003–2005 (18.6 per 100,000 population, with 108 deaths in 2005), followed by people aged 15–24 years (18.1 per 100,000, also with 108 deaths in 2005).

Figure H3.2 Suicide death rate, three-year moving average, by age, 1985-2005

Figure H3.2 Suicide death rates, by age, 1986–1988 to 2001–2003

Source: Ministry of Health, Public Health Intelligence
Notes: (1) The three-year moving average rates are plotted on the mid-point year (eg 2004 is the mid-point year of 2003–2005) (2) 2005 figures are provisional

The youth (15–24 year olds) suicide death rate increased steeply in the late-1980s, peaking at 27.2 per 100,000 people aged 15–24 years in 1995–1997. It has fallen by 33 percent since then, but is still higher than the 1985–1987 rate of 15.8 per 100,000. The pattern is similar for 25–34 year olds. Suicide death rates have been falling among people aged 45 years and over. These age patterns may reflect, in part, cohort effects.

Sex differences

Males have a much higher rate of death by suicide than females, with 20.3 deaths per 100,000 males in 2003–2005, compared with 6.5 deaths per 100,000 females.25 The male suicide rate increased sharply in the late-1980s, declined after 1996–1998, and in 2003–2005 was the same as the 1985–1987 rate of 20.3 deaths per 100,000 males. In comparison, the female rate has been relatively stable over the last 20 years. Because of the small numbers involved, it is more reliable to consider the trend over several years.

While the suicide death rate is higher for males, more females than males are hospitalised for intentional self-harm. In 2006, the female–male rate ratio for intentional self-harm in New Zealand was 2.0 female hospitalisations to every male hospitalisation per 100,000 population. Females more commonly choose methods that are less likely to be fatal.26

Ethnic differences

In 2005, there were 100 Māori deaths from suicide, accounting for 20 percent of all suicide deaths in that year. The three-year moving average age-standardised rate of suicide deaths in 2003–2005 was 17.9 per 100,000 population for Māori, compared to 12.0 per 100,000 for non-Māori. The suicide death rate for Māori youth (15–24 year olds) in 2003–2005 was 33.2 per 100,000, compared with the non-Māori rate of 14.6 per 100,000. Suicide death rates for both Māori and non-Māori, for all ages and youth, were lower in 2003–2005 than in 1996–1998. Because of the small numbers, trends in Māori suicide rates should be treated with caution.

International comparison

A comparison of the latest age-standardised suicide death rates in 13 OECD countries between 2002 and 2005 shows New Zealand’s (2005) rate was the fourth highest for males (18.2 per 100,000 males) and the fifth highest for females (5.9 per 100,000 females).27 Finland had the highest male suicide death rate (28.1 per 100,000 in 2004), while Japan had the highest female rate (9.5 per 100,000 in 2004). Australia (16.0 in 2003) had a lower rate of male suicide deaths than New Zealand, as did Canada and the United States (each 16.5 in 2002). The United Kingdom had the lowest male suicide death rate (9.8). Canada and Australia (4.7), the United States (3.8) and the United Kingdom (2.9) all reported lower female suicide death rates than New Zealand.

New Zealand had the second highest male youth (15–24 years) suicide death rate (after Finland), and the third highest female youth suicide death rate (after Finland and Japan). New Zealand is one of a small number of countries which have higher suicide death rates at younger ages than at older ages.28