Seasonal Associations between Weather Conditions and Suicide--Evidence against a Classic Hypothesis
Author(s) -
Vladeta AjdacicGross,
Christoph Lauber,
R. Sansossio,
Matthias Bopp,
Dominique Eich,
Michal Gostynski,
F Gutzwiller,
Wulf Rössler
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
american journal of epidemiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.33
H-Index - 256
eISSN - 1476-6256
pISSN - 0002-9262
DOI - 10.1093/aje/kwk034
Subject(s) - seasonality , suicide methods , demography , suicide prevention , poison control , climatology , series (stratigraphy) , injury prevention , environmental science , meteorology , geography , statistics , medicine , suicide rates , mathematics , medical emergency , geology , sociology , paleontology
Psychiatrists, epidemiologists, and sociologists have debated the existence of an association between weather conditions and suicide seasonality since the preliminary statistical investigations in the 19th century. Provided that the effect of weather conditions on suicide operates via a dose-response-like mechanism, time-series (Box-Jenkins) analysis permits an indirect test of the hypothesis that temperature or other weather variables promote higher suicide frequencies in late spring and early summer months. The authors modeled monthly data on suicide and climatic conditions (i.e., temperature, sunshine, and precipitation data) in Switzerland. Cross-correlations between the filtered (prewhitened) residual series were calculated for the period 1881-2000, for consecutive 30-year periods, for different suicide methods, and--with regard to the seasonality hypothesis--for series relying on moving 1- and 3-month frames. Positive cross-correlations emerged between suicide and temperature data for the whole time series, as well as in all consecutive 30-year periods. However, cross-correlations of data series based on moving frames showed a minor peak in associations for summer frames and a major peak in associations for winter frames, the latter reflecting suicides performed mainly outdoors (being run over by a train and jumping from high places). The results represent a novel minor effect in seasonality of suicide, which is hardly compatible with the hypothesized role of temperature in suicide seasonality.
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