June 06, 2019 | By Dr. Chris Ball
Suicide often leaves the bereaved with more
questions than answers. Many will find it difficult to ever understand why such
a drastic step was taken. The risk factors for suicide traditionally considered
by life insurance underwriters are highly influenced by routine clinical
assessments, often undertaken in acute situations following an episode of
self-directed violence.
Clinical factors in assessing suicide
risk are:
·
Diagnosis of mental
health co-morbidity
·
Use of a violent not a
passive method (e.g. hanging vs. poisoning)
·
Being male
·
Social hardship
·
A history of previous
attempts
The presence of these variables is sensitive in
identifying those who complete suicide, but they are also highly non-specific
in their ability to predict a rare, if tragic, event. One 2017 study (Large
et al.) concluded, “We need to acknowledge our powerlessness to usefully
classify individuals or groups of patients according to future
suicide risk”.1
The underwriter is required to assess risk over
a much longer arc than the clinician. Once a mental disorder has been disclosed
at application, questions about self-injurious thoughts and behaviour
inevitably follow. Despite the heavy reliance upon them, these questions have
statistically weak associations with later suicide attempts, or death by suicide,
and very poor sensitivity.2
This finding has been replicated among
psychiatric in-patients and for most mental health diagnoses, except
schizophrenia. In a review of recent evidence looking to identify individuals
who try suicide (attempters), as distinct from those who merely contemplate it
(ideators), another 2017 study (Klonsky et al.) found that “The majority
of traditionally cited risk factors for suicide - including depression,
hopelessness, most psychiatric disorders, and even impulsivity - predict
suicidal ideation but do not distinguish suicide attempters from suicide
ideators”.3
Identifying those with traditional risks factors
as a high-risk group, a meta-analysis found 95% of cases in that group would
not complete suicide. Over a five-year follow-up of patients, 5.5% of high-risk
patients died by suicide in contrast to 1% of low-risk patients. Overall, just
over half of suicides occurred in the high-risk group. In insurance terms, this
equates to potentially heavy ratings for a group of people who would be
unlikely to claim.4
Ribeiro et al. (2016) took a similar
approach, concluding that “The likelihood of death by suicide in the U.S. in a
given year is 12.5/100,000 (i.e., 0.000125); attempts are estimated to be
25 times more likely (i.e., 0.0031). The strongest predictor in this
meta-analysis was Non-Suicidal Self-Injury (NSSI) [weighted mean
OR 4.27] predicting future suicide attempts. Based on this estimate, the
presence of NSSI [non-suicidal self-injury] would still only increase the odds
of an attempt to 0.013 - a figure still nearly zero.”5
The lifetime prevalence of suicide has been
estimated at 8.6% in those who have ever been hospitalized for affective
disorders because of perceived suicide risk (suicidality); 4.0% in those ever
hospitalized without specification of suicidality; 2.2% in all psychiatric
patients and less than 0.5% in non-affective population.6 Despite
this, clinical practice does not offer a great deal of help to the underwriter
in most cases when mental health disclosures are made. The greatest risk is in
those with severe and enduring mental health problems who are relatively
unlikely to be within the insured population. Given this association, it is
notable that only 11% of suicide claims in one insured series had mental health
problems identified at underwriting.7
The underwriter is limited to looking at the
characteristics of the individual but can make no allowance for changes in
society that may have a profound impact upon the suicide rate. To cite one of
many examples, Corcoran et al. (2015) looked at the impact of the 2008
economic recession in Ireland.8 Prior to the recession, the
study found, incidence of suicide was falling but by the end of 2012 the male
rate was 57% higher than it would have been if the rate had continued its
downward trend. Female rates were almost unchanged. Men 25 to
44 years of age were most affected by the recession. There were 476 more
male and 85 more female deaths in the five years.
The changes associated with the economic
recession bucked the trend for a declining suicide rate in many countries
because of prevention and alcohol strategies, improvement in recognition and
treatment.9 In Japan a high rate of suicide occurred following
economic crashes, although the social meaning of suicide in Japan is different
from many other countries, and has more to do with culture than rates of mental
illness per se.10 The U.S. remains a significant
exception, where the unforeseen effects of over-prescribing opioids and the
economic recession have proved particularly toxic, and ready access to firearms
means 60% of gun deaths each year are suicides with a fatality rate
of 85%.11
In cultures where mental illness carries a
significant stigma, it may be less likely to appear on application forms or
within medical evidence, prompting no action on the part of the underwriter.
Apart from identifying the very few high-risk applicants (i.e. those with
severe mental health problems, drug and alcohol problems, or who have recently
been admitted to hospital following a suicide attempt by violent means) the
underwriter will have little impact on suicide claims. The drivers for
differing suicide rates in different markets are probably less related to the
individual risk factors identifiable by the standard underwriting process than
the influence of social and economic factors.
Endnotes
1.
Large et al.,
BJPsych Bulletin (2017) 41, 160-163, DOI: 10.1192/pb.bp.116.054940.
2.
Riberio et al.,
Psychol Med. 2016 January; 46(2): 225–236. DOI:10.1017/S0033291715001804.
3.
Klonsky et al.,
Current Opinions in Psychiatry 2017, 30:15–20. DOI:10.1097/YCO.0000000000000294
5.
Psychology Medicine 2016
January; 46(2): 225–236. DOI:10.1017/S0033291715001804.
6.
Bostwick &
Pankratz (2000) Affective disorders and suicide risk: a reexamination. Am J
Psychiatry.157.1925-32. DOI:10.1176/appi.ajp.157.12.1925.
7.
Goodwin, J. Suicide
Analysis: A closer look at a concerning trend. https://www.insurancegateway.co.za/download/10145.
8.
Corcoran et al.
(2015). Impact of the economic recession and subsequent austerity on suicide
and self-harm in Ireland: an interrupted time series analysis. International
Journal of Epidemiology, 2015, 969–977. DOI: 10.1093/ije/dyv058.
9.
Fond et al. (2016).
Disparities in suicide mortality trends between United States of America and 25
European Countries. Nature. Scientific Reports, 6:20256,
DOI: 10.1038/srep20256.
10.
Koo and Cox (2008). An
economic interpretation of suicide cycles in Japan. Federal Reserve Bank of
Dallas. Research department working paper 0603. https://core.ac.uk/download/pdf/6275417.pdf.
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