Year: 2013 Source: Social Science & Medicine.(2013).82:126-33.doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2012.12.021 SIEC No: 20130636

Previous research shows no consensus as to whether and how natural disasters affect suicide rates in their aftermath. Using prefecture-level panel data of natural disasters and suicide in Japan between 1982 and 2010, we estimate both contemporaneous and lagged effects of natural disasters on the suicide rates of various demographic groups. We find that when the damage caused by natural disasters is extremely large, as in the case of the Great Hanshin-Awaji Earthquake in 1995, suicide rates tend to increase in the immediate aftermath of the disaster and several years later. However, when the damage by natural disasters is less severe, suicide rates tend to decrease after the disasters, especially one or two years later. Thus, natural disasters affect the suicide rates of affected populations in a complicated way, depending on the severity of damages as well as on how many years have passed since the disaster. We also find that the effects of natural disasters on suicide rates vary considerably across demographic groups, which suggests that some population subgroups are more vulnerable to the impact of natural disasters than others.

Contact us for a copy of this article, or view online at https://www.researchgate.net/publication/234103865_Natural_disasters_and_suicide_Evidence_from_Japan?ev=publicSearchHeader&_sg=xTaRkF6Ltttscn6HaAIOoljLttSXcidxPkJWrwIZUyAOo1tN0vvSI-teiI3q9A8MaqwIsFuNW3s2aX8