Previous work on broad occupational groups has noted that suicide rates are
higher among manual workers than nonmanual workers. However, it is not cle
ar if this is due to occupational strains per se, or the covariates of manu
al worker status such as gender, and marital strain. The present study expl
ores suicide risk among a group of skilled manual workers: carpenters. Data
are taken from the U.S. Public Health Service Annual Mortality Detail File
tapes for 1990. A bivariate analysis finds that carpenters are 1.996 times
more likely than the rest of the working age population to die of suicide.
However, once controls are introduced for gender, race, marital status and
other sociodemographic variables, carpenters are only 1.15 times more at r
isk of suicide than the working age population. The results are consistent
with those of an earlier study of laborers. While working class occupations
are marked by suicide risk, the risk may be due more to the covariates of
these occupations than the occupations themselves.