Abstract
Comparison of suicide rates in the USA and Australia between 1921 and 2020: Major shifts in youth and elderly suicide rates over a century
Ma, S., Ullah, S., Allison, S., Kisely, S., Looi, J. & Bastiampillai, T.
Trends in the US and Australian suicide mortality have shifted
over the last 100 years, with notable differences between age
groups and genders.
Aims
This study compared overall and gender- and age-specific
suicide rates from 1921 to 2020 in the USA and Australia to
determine long-term variation for each country.
Method
Suicide data (1921–2020, inclusive) were obtained from the US
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Australian
Institute of Health and Welfare. Poisson regression was used to
assess whether suicide rates between groups were significantly
different.
Results
Overall suicide rates were higher in the USA compared to
Australia, from 1921 to the 1940s, but were similar from the
1950s onwards. While male suicide rates fluctuated, female
suicide rates were relatively stable (except for Australian women
in the 1960s). In the USA and Australia, suicide rates for young
males have significantly increased since the 1950s, while they
have decreased for the older male population since the 1940s.
Conclusions
While overall national suicide rates were relatively stable over
100 years apart from during war and economic depression, male
suicide rates in the USA and Australia experienced significant
age-related changes over the century. These include major
declines in males aged over 65 years but also an increase in
suicides for those aged between 15 and 44. Suicide rates across
age groups have therefore converged, regressing towards the
mean for all age groups combined.