Site icon Women Fitness

Abuse and HIV status linked to suicide risk in women

Abuse and HIV status linked to suicide risk in women
March 22, 2005

Women who are HIV-positive or are abused are more likely to think about or attempt suicide, according to a new study by researchers from the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, George Washington University and St. Michael’s Hospital in Toronto. The study, consistent with previous research, sheds new light on the extent to which being in an abusive relationship compounds suicide risk for HIV-positive women in particular. This latest study is published in the March/April 2005 issue of the US journal Women’s Health Issues. ‘Given that suicide is the fourth leading cause of death for women ages 15-44 (in both the US and in Canada), there is a need for further research on risk and opportunities for prevention,’ said Dr. Andrea Gielen, lead author of the study and deputy director of the Center for Injury Research and Policy at the Bloomberg School of Public Health. The researchers used data from Project WAVE (Women, AIDS and the Violence Epidemic) to examine the rates of suicidal thoughts and attempts, as well as to gauge anxiety and depression. They also set out to learn how these outcomes differed based on women’s HIV and abuse experiences. The women were all living in low-income, urban neighbourhoods. Of the 611 women interviewed, 31 percent reported having thought about suicide and 16 percent reported having attempted suicide. Abused women were four times more likely than non-abused women to have thought about suicide. The researchers also found that, among HIV-positive women, those recently diagnosed thought about suicide more frequently. In addition, one-half of the study participants reported problems with depression and 26 percent reported problems with anxiety. Twenty-four percent of non-abused, HIV-negative women had problems with depression, whereas 72 percent of abused, HIV-positive women reported the same. Abused, HIV-positive women were seven times more likely to report problems with depression, about five times more likely to have problems with anxiety, almost four times more likely to have thought about suicide and 12.5 times more likely to have attempted suicide, when compared to HIV-negative, non-abused women. The researchers also note that abused, HIV-negative women were at an elevated risk for depression, anxiety, suicidal thoughts and suicide attempts, indicating that the abuse is associated with the negative outcomes. ‘Health care and service providers who interact with women who may be HIV-positive or are in an abusive relationship should routinely look for mental health issues, such as suicidal thoughts. It may be the case that crisis intervention is needed to help women in these situations,’ said Gielen, who is also a professor in the Bloomberg School of Public Health’s Department of Health Policy and Management. The study was supported by a grant from the US National Institutes of Mental Health.

Sources: Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health; George Washington University; St. Michael’s Hospital

Exit mobile version