Suicide and Suicidal Behavior in the Gulf Cooperation Council Countries: A Systematic Review of Behavioral Patterns, Sociocultural Determinants, and Structural Vulnerabilities
Suicide and suicidal behavior in the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries remain underrepresented in empirical research, largely due to cultural stigma, legal prohibitions, and systematic underreporting. The behavioral and sociocultural determinants of suicidal behavior in these contexts—where rapid modernization intersects with Islamic normative frameworks and large-scale labor migration—have received particularly limited systematic attention. This review synthesizes available evidence on the prevalence, behavioral patterns, risk factors, and structural determinants of suicidal behavior across Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates. Following PRISMA 2020 guidelines, we searched PubMed, Scopus, ScienceDirect, Web of Science, and Google Scholar for primary research published between 2000 and 2025. Fifty studies (34 GCC-specific and 16 contextual/comparative) met the inclusion criteria. Methodological quality was appraised using the Newcastle–Ottawa Scale, JBI checklists, the Mixed Methods Appraisal Tool, and the AACODS checklist. The review protocol was registered on the Open Science Framework (DOI: 10.17605/OSF.IO/RZXY7). The findings were organized into six dimensions: (1) suicide prevalence, risk factors, and associated behaviors; (2) cultural and religious influences; (3) mental health of specific at-risk populations; (4) healthcare and support services; (5) migrant worker vulnerabilities; and (6) research trends. Reported suicide rates in the GCC range from 1.5 to 4.2 per 100,000 but likely underestimate the true prevalence due to forensic misclassification and stigma. Migrant workers constitute a high-risk subgroup, with suicidal ideation reaching 68% among those facing acute financial distress. Islamic religiosity is associated with lower suicide mortality but simultaneously deters help-seeking by stigmatizing mental distress. Interpreted through a Durkheimian lens, these findings position suicidal behavior in the GCC as a social fact shaped by weakened social integration and normative fragmentation under rapid modernization. Effective prevention requires culturally adapted behavioral interventions that integrate labor welfare reforms with community-based mental health strategies.
Suicide and suicidal behavior in the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries remain underrepresented in empirical research, largely due to cultural stigma, legal prohibitions, and systematic…
Abstract
Introduction:
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