Published: 09-10-2019 06:00 | Updated: 09-10-2019 14:01

Low intelligence linked to suicide risk later in life

Photo of man looking sad.

People with low scores on intelligence tests in adolescence run a higher risk of suicide and suicide attempt later in life. That is according to a study from Karolinska Institutet in Sweden that followed almost 50,000 Swedish men from the 1970s until recently. The study is published in the journal Psychological Medicine.

Photo of Alma Sörberg Wallin and Nora Hansson Bittar.

Prior studies have linked low intelligence and low emotional control to an increased risk of suicide. This study adds to that body of research by looking at how the association between suicidal behavior in people with low intelligence and emotional control develops over a period of almost 40 years.

The study showed that the risk of suicide later in life remained high in people with low intelligence in their youth. The same stable negative correlation was not seen in people deemed to have low emotional control in their earlier years. For these people, the risk of suicide decreased over time.

Weaker link over time for people with low emotional control

“The most interesting aspect of this study is that the negative effect of low emotional stability is strongest in adolescence,” says Alma Sörberg Wallin, psychologist and project coordinator at the Department of Public Health Sciences at Karolinska Institutet and one of the study’s authors. “Among people in their 50s, the association between low emotional stability and suicide is much weaker. That adds a certain level of hope and supports the description of suicide as a permanent solution to a temporary problem.”

Made with Visme Infographic Maker

To compare intelligence and emotional control with suicidal behavior, the researchers divided the men on a five-level scale that corresponded to IQ bands ranging from less than 82 to more than 126 and emotional control variables ranging from one (very low) to five (very high). They used death and hospital discharge registers to identify suicides and attempted suicides between 1973-2008.

Low intelligence means six times higher risk for suicide

The researchers found that people with the lowest measured intelligence were as much as six times more likely to attempt or die from suicide compared to those with the highest intelligence. Similarly, men with the least emotional control had an almost seven-fold higher risk of suicidal behavior than men in the highest category. For men with low IQ, the strong association remained over time whereas men with low emotional control in their adolescence seemed less vulnerable to suicide as they aged.

Made with Visme Infographic Maker

The mechanisms are not fully known, but previous findings show that people with lower intelligence typically face more socioeconomic adversity later in life.

“For example, intelligence is strongly linked to educational success, and without a high educational degree you are more likely to end up in a low socioeconomic position or become unemployed,” says Nora Hansson Bittár, psychology student and the study’s main author. “This highlights the need for support and preventive measures. No one should end up in such a vulnerable situation that suicide appears to be the only way out.”

The study was financed with grants from the Swedish Research Council for Health, Working Life and Welfare.

Publication

How intelligence and emotional control are related to suicidal behavior across the life course,” Hansson Bittár N, Falkstedt D, Sörberg Wallin A (2019). Psychological Medicine, October 9, 2019, DOI: 10.1017/S0033291719002423