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Lack of Employment Raises Suicide Risk
Unemployment impacts all areas of an individual?s life, including the risk of suicide. A New Zealand study found that unemployment can triple that risk. (These findings were published recently in the Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health.) Using data from the 1991 New Zealand census, the researchers learned that unemployed 25- to 44- year-old men and women and 45- to 64-year-old men were 2 to 3 times more likely to commit suicide, compared with their employed peers. The researchers suggest that a society?s unemployment rate may be a sign of lack of social cohesion, which in turn is associated with increased suicides.
Articles in this issue
about 22 years ago
Age-Related Dementia Traced to Virusesabout 22 years ago
Substance Abuse Linked with ADHDabout 22 years ago
Political Violence Has Lasting Effectabout 22 years ago
Outlook Is Positive for Getting Olderabout 22 years ago
They're Still Laughing After All Those Yearsabout 22 years ago
Mental Decline Goes Unnoticedabout 22 years ago
Constant Use of the Pill Eases Endometriosisabout 22 years ago
Diuretics Help Hipsabout 22 years ago
Eye Disease Grows as Seniors Ageabout 22 years ago
Alzheimer's Disease Resources Are AvailableNewsletter
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