
@article{ref1,
title="Suicide within 12 months of mental health service contact in different age and diagnostic groups: National clinical survey",
journal="British journal of psychiatry",
year="2006",
author="Hunt, Isabelle M. and Kapur, Navneet and Robinson, Jeff and Shaw, Jon and Flynn, Sandra Marie and Bailey, Heatherlee and Meehan, Janet and Bickley, Harriet and Burns, J. and Appleby, Louis and Parsons, Rebecca",
volume="188",
number="",
pages="135-142",
abstract="BACKGROUND: Suicide prevention is a health service priority but the most effective approaches to prevention may differ between different patient groups. AIMS: To describe social and clinical characteristics in cases of suicide from different age and diagnostic groups. METHOD: A national clinical survey of a 4-year (1996-2000) sample of cases of suicide in England and Wales where there had been recent (&lt;1 year) contact with mental health services (n=4859). RESULTS: Deaths of young patients were characterised by jumping from a height or in front of a vehicle, schizophrenia, personality disorder, unemployment and substance misuse. In older patients, drowning, depression, living alone, physical illness, recent bereavement and suicide pacts were more common. People with schizophrenia were often in-patients and died by violent means. About a third of people with depressive disorder died within a year of illness onset. Those with substance dependence or personality disorder had high rates of disengagement from services. CONCLUSIONS: Prevention measures likely to benefit young people include targeting schizophrenia, dual diagnosis and loss of service contact; those aimed at depression, isolation and physical ill-health should have more effect on elderly people.",
language="",
issn="0007-1250",
doi="10.1192/bjp.188.2.135",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/bjp.188.2.135"
}