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Journal Article

Citation

Stanistreet D, Jeffrey V. Crisis 2003; 24(3): 122-127.

Affiliation

Department of Public Health, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, UK. debbi@liv.ac.uk

Copyright

(Copyright © 2003, International Association for Suicide Prevention, Publisher Hogrefe Publishing)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

14518645

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Deaths from injury and poisoning (suicide, accidents, undetermined deaths, and homicide) are the major cause of death among young men aged 15-39 years in England and Wales and have been increasing in recent years. AIM: To describe common characteristics among young men who die from injury and poisoning. DESIGN: We employed a retrospective survey methodology to investigate factors associated with deaths by injury and poisoning among young men aged 15-39 years (n = 268) in Merseyside and Cheshire during 1995. Data were collected from Coroner's inquest notes and General Practitioner records. MAIN RESULTS: The most common cause of death was poisoning by alcohol and drugs (29.1%, n = 78). A high proportion of cases were unemployed (39.4%, n = 106). Cases were also more likely to be single compared to the general population (74.2% vs 55.5%). Self-destructive behaviour was evident in 77% of deaths (n = 206). CONCLUSIONS: Alcohol and drug use are important contributory factors to injury and poisoning deaths. More research is needed into the effects of unemployment and being single on the health of young men, and to investigate the motivations behind risk taking and self-destructive behaviour.


Language: en

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