Projected temperature increases through 2050 could lead to an additional 21,000 suicides in the United States and Mexico.
Research provides strong evidence that hotter weather ups both suicide rates and the use of depressive language on social media. The findings of the study led by Stanford economist Marshall Burke are published in Nature Climate Change. "When talking about climate change, it's often easy to think in abstractions. But the thousands of additional suicides that are likely to occur as a result of unmitigated climate change are not just a number, they represent tragic losses for families across the country," said Burke, assistant professor of Earth system science in the School of Earth, Energy & Environmental Sciences at Stanford.
Researchers have recognized for centuries that suicides tend to peak during warmer months. But, many factors beyond temperature also vary seasonally - such as unemployment rates or the amount of daylight - and up to this point it has been difficult to disentangle the role of temperature from other risk factors.
"Suicide is one of the leading causes of death globally, and suicide rates in the U.S. have risen dramatically over the last 15 years. So better understanding the causes of suicide is a public health priority," Burke said.
Heat and suicide
To tease out the role of temperature from other factors, the researchers compared historical temperature and suicide data across thousands of U.S. counties and Mexican municipalities over several decades. The team also analyzed the language in over half a billion Twitter updates or tweets to further determine whether hotter temperatures affect mental well-being. They analyzed, for example, whether tweets contain language such as "lonely," "trapped" or "suicidal" more often during hot spells.
"Surprisingly, these effects differ very little based on how rich populations are or if they are used to warm weather," Burke said.
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Effect of climate change
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"We've been studying the effects of warming on conflict and violence for years, finding that people fight more when it's hot. Now we see that in addition to hurting others, some individuals hurt themselves. It appears that heat profoundly affects the human mind and how we decide to inflict harm," said Solomon Hsiang, study co-author and associate professor at theUniversity of California, Berkeley.
The authors stress that rising temperature and climate change should not be viewed as direct motivations for suicide. Instead, they point out that temperature and climate may increase the risk of suicide by affecting the likelihood that an individual situation leads to an attempt at self-harm.
"Hotter temperatures are clearly not the only, nor the most important, risk factor for suicide," Burke emphasized. "But our findings suggest that warming can have a surprisingly large impact on suicide risk, and this matters for both our understanding of mental health as well as for what we should expect as temperatures continue to warm."
Source-Eurekalert