High-Altitude Living Boosts Suicide Risk
By wchung | 27 Mar, 2026
Americans and Koreans living at higher altitudes are more suicide prone, found a study published in the September issue of the American Journal of Psychiatry.
The results were based on 592,000 suicide victims in the U.S. between 1979 and 1998 and 47,000 in Korea between 2005 and 2008 analyzed by Perry F. Renshaw, at the University of Utah School of Medicine, and Kim Nam-kug, a radiology professor at Asan Medical Center, University of Ulsan College of Medicine.
Americans living at altitudes of 1,000 meters (3,281 feet) above sea level or higher were 34% more likely to commit suicide than those living below that level. For Koreans the corresponding figure was reported as 63% though the nation has no towns or cities at those altitudes. Figures were extrapolated based on an established relationship between suicide rates and altitude, said Kim.
The reason for the correlation may be hypoxia, or inadequate oxygen intake, the researchers suggested. At sea level oxygen makes up 21% of air by volume. At 1,000-meters, it drops to 18%. A prolonged state of mild hypoxia has been found to cause mild damage to the brain, which might trigger depression.
“The suicide rate is higher in the mountainous regions of northern Italy compared to the coastal south,” said Kim. “This is the first study that reveals that altitude may have a bearing on the risk of suicide.”
Yet the Korean towns known for longevity are located at altitudes of 300 to 400 meters, reports Chosun Ilbo. Among them are Gurye and Gokseong in South Jeolla Province and Soonchang in North Jeolla Province.
Articles
- Tiger Woods Arrested for DUI After Florida Rollover
- BTS Tops UK Charts with Comeback Album
- Let's Be Good Again So We Can Be Great Again
- Iran-Linked Hackers Access FBI Director's Personal Email, Publish Online
- US Can Confirm Only a Third of Iran's Missile Arsenal Destroyed,
- Chinese Ships Balk at Hormuz Despite Safe Passage Assurances from Iran
- SpaceX Listing Stirs Social Media Frenzy, Ticker Bets
- Sony to Hike PlayStation 5 Prices Again on Surge in Memory Chip Costs
- Huawei's AI Chip Earns Credibility with ByteDance, Alibaba Orders
- SoftBank Secures $40 Billion Loan for More OpenAI Investments
