Suicide attempts preceding completed suicide
- PMID: 9926085
- DOI: 10.1192/bjp.173.6.531
Suicide attempts preceding completed suicide
Abstract
Background: This study investigated three questions with major implications for suicide prevention: the sensitivity of the history of previous suicide attempt(s) as an indicator of suicide risk, the time interval from a preceding suicide attempt to the fatal one, and switching of suicide methods by those eventually completing suicide.
Method: The lifetime history of suicide attempts and the methods the victims (n = 1397) used were examined in a nationwide psychological autopsy study comprising all suicides in Finland within a 12-month research period in 1987-1988.
Results: Overall, 56% of suicide victims were found to have died at their first suicide attempt, more males (62%) than females (38%). In 19% of males and 39% of females the victim had made a non-fatal attempt during the final year. Of the victims with previous attempts, 82% had used at least two different methods in their suicide attempts (the fatal included).
Conclusions: Most male and a substantial proportion of female suicides die in their first suicide attempt, a fact that necessitates early recognition of suicide risk, particularly among males. Recognition of periods of high suicide risk on the grounds of recent non-fatal suicide attempts is likely to be important for suicide prevention among females. Subjects completing suicide commonly switch from one suicide method to another, a finding that weakens but does not negate the credibility of restrictions on the availability of lethal methods as a preventive measure.
Comment in
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Suicide attempts v. deliberate self-harm.Br J Psychiatry. 1999 Jul;175:90. doi: 10.1192/bjp.175.1.90a. Br J Psychiatry. 1999. PMID: 10621779 No abstract available.
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