Interaction domains and suicide: A population-based panel study of suicides in Stockholm, 1991-1999

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Abstract

This article examines how suicides influence suicide risks of others within two interaction domains: the family and the workplace. A distinction is made between dyad-based social-interaction effects and degree-based exposure effects. A unique database including all individuals who ever lived in Stockholm during the 1990s is analyzed. For about 5.6years on average, 1.2 million individuals are observed, and 1,116 of them commit suicide. Controlling for other risk factors, men exposed to a suicide in the family (at work) are 8.3 (3.5) times more likely to commit suicide than nonexposed men. The social-interaction effect thus is larger within the family domain; yet work-domain exposure is more important for the suicide rate because individuals are more often exposed to suicides of coworkers than family members.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)713-740
Number of pages28
JournalSocial Forces
Volume87
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2008
Externally publishedYes

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