The politics of hope and despair: the effect of presidential election outcomes on suicide rates.

Social Science Quarterly
Timothy J Classen, Richard A Dunn

Abstract

This article examines the effect of election outcomes on suicide rates by combining the theory of social integration developed by Durkheim with the models of rational choice used in economics. Theory predicts that states with a greater percentage of residents who supported the losing candidate would tend to exhibit a relative increase in suicide rates. However, being around others who also supported the losing candidate may indicate a greater degree of social integration at the local level, thereby lowering relative suicide rates. We therefore use fixed-effects regression of state suicide rates from 1981 to 2005 on state election outcomes during presidential elections to determine which effect is stronger. We find that the local effect of social integration is dominant. The suicide rate when a state supports the losing candidate will tend to be lower than if the state had supported the winning candidate-4.6 percent lower for males and 5.3 percent lower for females. Social integration works at many levels; it not only affects suicide risk directly, but can mediate other shocks that influence suicide risk.

References

Dec 1, 1976·American Sociological Review·D Archer, R Gartner
Feb 1, 1992·The Journal of Social Psychology·D Lester, B Yang
Mar 1, 1980·The American Psychologist·R Schulz, M Bazerman
Apr 13, 2004·Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry·Katja Becker, Martin H Schmidt

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Citations

Mar 5, 2013·Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology·Augustine J Kposowa
Feb 25, 2015·Crisis·Tamás ZondaMónika Ditta Tóth
Jan 4, 2013·American Journal of Men's Health·James E Leone, Michael J Rovito
Dec 19, 2020·Applied Health Economics and Health Policy·Alexander Maas, Liang Lu

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