4.5 Article

Intimate partner violence victimization and perpetration as precursors to suicide

Journal

SSM-POPULATION HEALTH
Volume 18, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ssmph.2022.101079

Keywords

Suicide; Intimate partner violence; Surveillance; Domestic violence; Firearms

Funding

  1. University of North Carolina (UNC)
  2. Injury Prevention Research Center (IPRC)
  3. National Center for Injury Prevention and Control at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for an Injury Control Research Center [R49/CE19-003092]
  4. National Center for Injury Prevention and Control at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)

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This study explores the role of intimate partner violence (IPV) in suicide. The findings suggest that IPV may be a precursor for at least 4.5% of single suicides. Most IPV-related suicides involved males who had perpetrated nonfatal IPV prior to dying by suicide. Both men and women had a higher likelihood of IPV-related suicide if they had recently disclosed suicidal intent, were younger, used a firearm, and were involved with the criminal legal system.
It remains unclear how often and under what circumstances intimate partner violence (IPV) precedes suicide. Available research on IPV and suicide focuses largely on homicide-suicide, which is a rare event (< 2% of suicides). We focus instead on single suicides (i.e., suicides unconnected to other violent deaths), which are the most common type of fatal violence in the US. Unfortunately, information about IPV circumstances is often unavailable for suicides. To address this gap, we sought to identify the proportion of single suicides that were preceded by IPV in North Carolina (NC), to describe the prevalence of IPV victimization and perpetration as precursors to suicide, and to explore how IPV-related suicides differ from other suicides. We used data from the NC Violent Death Reporting System (2010-2017, n = 9682 single suicides) and hand-reviewed textual data for a subset of cases (n = 2440) to document IPV circumstances. We had robust inter-rater reliability (Kappa: 0.73) and identified n = 439 IPV-related suicides. Most were males who had perpetrated nonfatal IPV (n = 319, 72.7%) prior to dying by suicide. Our findings suggest that IPV was a precursor for at least 4.5% of single suicides. Next, we conducted logistic regression analyses by sex comparing IPV-related suicides to other suicides. For both men and women, IPV was more common when the person who died by suicide had recently disclosed suicidal intent, was younger, used a firearm, and was involved with the criminal legal system, even after controlling for covariates. We also found sex-specific correlates for IPV circumstances in suicide. Combined with homicide-suicide data (reported elsewhere), IPV is likely associated with 6.1% or more of suicides overall. Results suggest clear missed opportunities to intervene for this unique subpopulation, such as suicide screening and referral in IPV settings (e.g., batterer intervention programs, Family Justice Centers) that is tailored by sex.

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