Clustering of suicides among people with mental illness
- PMID: 16260825
- DOI: 10.1192/bjp.187.5.476
Clustering of suicides among people with mental illness
Abstract
Background: Most previous investigations of imitative suicide have reported suicide clustering in the general population, either temporal clustering following media reporting of suicide or case studies of geographically localised clusters.
Aims: To determine whether space - time and space-time-method clustering occur in a national case register of those who had recent contact with mental health services and had died by suicide and to estimate the suicide imitation rate in this population.
Method: Knox tests were used for space-time and space-time-method clustering. Model simulations were used to estimate effect size.
Results: Highly significant space-time and space-time-method clustering was found in a sample of 2741 people who died by suicide over 4 years who had had recent contact with one of 105 mental health trusts. Model simulations with an imitation rate of 10.1% (CI 4-17) reproduced the observed space-time-method clustering.
Conclusions: This study provides indirect evidence that imitative suicide occurs among people with mental illnesses and may account for about 10% of suicides by current and recent patients.
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