4.4 Article

Parenthood and lower risk of suicide in women and men: the total Swedish population followed across adulthood

Journal

SOCIAL PSYCHIATRY AND PSYCHIATRIC EPIDEMIOLOGY
Volume 57, Issue 11, Pages 2241-2250

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00127-022-02321-y

Keywords

Suicide; Parents; Life course; Cohort; Epidemiology

Categories

Funding

  1. Swedish Research Council [523-2010-1052]
  2. Swedish Research Council for Health, Working Life and Welfare [2017-00173]
  3. Karolinska Institute
  4. Forte [2017-00173] Funding Source: Forte

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This study found that parenthood has a protective effect on suicide, especially in young adults, but this protection weakens with increasing age and becomes similar between sexes in older age groups. Regardless of marital status, parents have a lower risk of suicide, except for married men who only have a lower risk above the age of 55.
Background Previous studies suggest a protective effect of parenthood on suicide, but little is known about how the association may change across the lifespan, or in relation to sex, marital status or occurrence of psychiatric disorders. Methods We followed a cohort of over 5 million Swedish women and men, from 1991 to 2011, up to max. age 75, for death by suicide using national registers. Information on childbirths/adoptions, potential confounders and modifying factors were obtained from national registers. We assessed the associations between parenthood and suicide across adulthood using within time-stratified Cox regression models, with parenthood as a time-dependent exposure. Results Parents had a lower risk of suicide than non-parents across the lifespan, after adjusting for sociodemographic factors. The association was most pronounced in young adults, especially young women, but attenuated with increasing age and converged between sexes in older age groups. The lower risk of suicide over the life course was similar whether parents were married, unmarried or divorced, apart from married men; among them, parents only had a lower risk above age 55. The lower risk in parents was also evident in people with a history of psychiatric hospitalizations, but disappeared from age 55 in this population. Conclusion The lower risk of suicide was present in both parents, was most pronounced in young adulthood and weakened with increasing age. Our results are consistent with a plausible mechanism where feelings of responsibility and connectedness are protective against suicide in parents.

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