The Impact of Socioeconomic Factors on State Suicide Rates: a Methodological Note
Kunce M~~Anderson A L
Examines the purported impact of conventional socioeconomic & social environment factors on annual, state-level suicide rates. Results from an inductive fixed-effects analysis, of state-level time-series/cross-section data for the period 1985-95, do little to support Durkheim’s social causes hypothesis that aggregate socioeconomic factors matter in explaining state suicide rates. A possible source of heterogeneity-aggregation bias is identified, raising questions surrounding past interferences made in aggregate suicide research. The data & empirical method support a mounting sentiment of an abiding ecological fallacy in the suicide literature. Implications of this investigation call for a shift in research focus & method to a smaller unit of analysis. (25 refs)