1. An examination of suicide research and funding in New Zealand 2006-16: implications for new research and policies.
- Author
-
Coppersmith, Daniel D. L., Nada-Raja, Shyamala, and Beautrais, Annette L.
- Subjects
BEHAVIOR ,DATABASES ,RESEARCH methodology ,POLICY sciences ,PUBLIC administration ,PUBLIC health ,RESEARCH funding ,SUICIDE ,DEVELOPED countries ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Objective. Suicide is a significant public health problem in New Zealand, with the youth suicide rate being one of the highest among developed countries. Increased suicide rates in recent years suggest that the evidence base and research priorities for New Zealand suicide prevention need to be reassessed. To inform policy development, the aim of the present study was to evaluate all peer-reviewed New Zealand published suicide research and major grant allocations from 2006 to 2016. Methods. The methodology duplicated a recent Australian review of suicide prevention research and funding. Publications and grant funding allocations were assessed independently. Key research databases were searched in April 2016 for all suicide-related publications. Identified papers were then classified by research type, population focus and type of self-injurious behaviour. Citation indices were obtained for each publication. Annual reports, newsletters and summary data from four major New Zealand funding bodies (the Health Research Council of New Zealand, Marsden Fund, Lottery Health Research and the Ministry of Health) were reviewed for funding allocations. Identified grants were coded for type of project, type of self-injurious behaviour and target population. Descriptive analyses were performed. Results. In all, 104 published articles and 27 grants met review criteria. Total funding was NZ$12 677 261.62. Most published articles were epidemiological in nature and the most common type of grant was for an intervention. Conclusions. In the past decade, a substantial number of articles has been published and significant funding was invested in New Zealand's suicide research. The present review suggests that future research investments should focus on effective translation of research findings into suicide prevention programs. Several pragmatic recommendations are proposed to help improve the evidence base and reduce New Zealand's suicide rates. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF