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Journal Article

Citation

Conner A, Azrael DR, Miller M. Ann. Intern Med. 2019; ePub(ePub): ePub.

Affiliation

Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health and Northeastern University, Boston, Massachusetts (M.M.).

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, American College of Physicians)

DOI

10.7326/M19-1324

PMID

31791066

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The suicide case-fatality rate (CFR)-the proportion of suicidal acts that are fatal-depends on the distribution of methods used in suicidal acts and the probability of death given a particular method (method-specific CFR).

OBJECTIVE: To estimate overall and method-specific suicide CFRs and the distribution of methods used in suicidal acts by demographic characteristics.

DESIGN: Cross-sectional study. SETTING: United States, 2007 to 2014. PARTICIPANTS: Suicide deaths (n = 309 377 records from the National Vital Statistics System) and nonfatal suicide attempts requiring treatment in an emergency department (ED) (n = 1 791 638 records from the Nationwide Emergency Department Sample) or hospitalization (n = 1 556 871 records from the National [Nationwide] Inpatient Sample) among persons aged 5 years or older. MEASUREMENTS: Rates of suicide deaths and nonfatal suicide attempts, overall and method-specific CFRs, and distribution of methods used, by sex, age group, region, and urbanization.

RESULTS: Overall, 8.5% of suicidal acts were fatal (14.7% for males vs. 3.3% for females; 3.4% for persons aged 15 to 24 years vs. 35.4% for those aged ≥65 years). Drug poisoning accounted for 59.4% of acts but only 13.5% of deaths; firearms and hanging accounted for only 8.8% of acts but 75.3% of deaths. Firearms were the most lethal method (89.6% of suicidal acts with a firearm resulted in death), followed by drowning (56.4%) and hanging (52.7%).

METHOD-specific CFRs were higher for males and older persons. The distribution of methods varied across demographic groups. LIMITATIONS: Results are based on suicidal acts resulting in an ED visit, a hospitalization, or death. Consequently, the reported CFRs are larger than they would have been had the data included nonfatal attempts that did not result in an ED visit.

CONCLUSION: Variation in overall suicide CFR between sexes and across age groups, regions, and urbanization is largely explained by the distribution of methods used in suicidal acts. PRIMARY FUNDING SOURCE: Joyce Foundation.


Language: en

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