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Journal of Engineering, Project, and Production Management, 2024, 14(2), 0017

 

Suicides among Construction Occupations in the UK

 

Billy Hare1, Kenneth Lawani2, and Gail McEwen3

1Professor, Department of Construction and Surveying, Glasgow Caledonian University, 70 Cowcaddens Road, Glasgow, UK, E-mail: b.hare@gcu.ac.uk (corresponding author).
2Senior Lecturer, Department of Construction and Surveying, Glasgow Caledonian University, 70 Cowcaddens Road, Glasgow, UK, E-mail: Kenneth.Lawani@gcu.ac.uk
3Research Assistant, Department of Construction and Surveying, Glasgow Caledonian University, 70 Cowcaddens Road, Glasgow, UK, E-mail: Gail.McEwen@gcu.ac.uk

 

Project Management

 

Received June 29, 2023; revised July 15, 2023; accepted October 9, 2023

 

Available online November 5, 2023

 

Abstract: Studies on mental health are increasingly complementing those on safety and physical health within the construction research community, with suicide numbers being an indicative measure of mental health. In the UK, deaths by suicide are approximately 470 per year, which dwarfs fatal accident numbers. The aim of this paper is to review the evidence base about suicide and construction workers. The methods consisted of two approaches: combining secondary data from UK statistical databases to create a suicide rate per 100,000 for construction occupations; and a systematic literature review to help explain the suicide rates observed. Trend analysis of suicide rates, from 2015 to 2021 shows construction occupations to be approximately three times that of the combined non-construction occupations, and steadily rising, whereas non-construction rates have remained relatively steady. Unskilled workers have the highest rate, around seven times managers and professional occupations. Potential reasons for this, found in the literature, included managers/professionals’ greater propensity to shift beliefs about suicide stigmas, and skilled workers being more likely to report substance abuse; - rather than hide it, thereby increasing opportunities to discuss and resolve such issues to reduce suicide risk. However, the socio-economic risk associated with unskilled workers means being poor is certainly not good for their mental health. The analysis presented in this paper informs industry policy and practice by uncovering a previously unknown upward trend in suicide rates among UK construction workers, along with a focused list of evidence-based factors to inform further research on why this phenomenon is occurring.

 

Keywords: Suicide, Mental Health, Occupation, Unskilled

Copyright © Journal of Engineering, Project, and Production Management (EPPM-Journal).

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.

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Citation: Hare, B., Lawani, K., and McEwen, G. (2024). Suicides Among Construction Occupations in the UK. Journal of Engineering, Project, and Production Management, 14(2), 0017.

DOI: 10.32738/JEPPM-2024-0017

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