Suicidality in the Arab world: Part I: Community studies
Author: Karam, E.G., Hajjar, R.V., Salamoun, M.M.
Source:
Arab Journal of Psychiatry, Vol 18(2), Nov 2007, 99-107
Abstract
This paper reviews published community based studies that assessed suicidality in the Arab world. A search was conducted on several search engines (PubMed, Psychinfo, IDRAAC WEB/CD) up to 2006 (Bahrain,
Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Morocco, Oman, Palestine, Saudi
Arabia, Sudan and United Arab Emirates). Results varied across countries
and methods. In Arab community studies, the prevalence of lifetime suicide
ideation varied from a low of 2.09% to a high of 13.9% and the lifetime
prevalence of attempts from 0.72% to 6.3%. In about all community studies
which assessed lifetime and 12 months suicide, ideation was significantly
related to being a female. Twelve month suicide ideation was significantly
related to depressive symptoms and experiencing more life events, illnesses
and using more tranquilizers/sleeping pills. One month suicide ideation was
related to non-married status, not having children and a history of psychiatric disorders, specifically MDD, dysthymia, agoraphobia, OCD and GAD.
When compared to female university students, females who were displaced
or refugees were significantly more likely to report suicide ideation (within
the “past few weeks”). In conclusion, national epidemiological studies are
needed to assess the prevalence and risk factors of suicidal behaviors in the
Arab World.