Epidemiology of Suicide and the Psychiatric Perspective

2018 International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 1,313 citations

Abstract

Suicide is a worldwide phenomenon. This review is based on a literature search of the World Health Organization (WHO) databases and PubMed. According to the WHO, in 2015, about 800,000 suicides were documented worldwide, and globally 78% of all completed suicides occur in low- and middle-income countries. Overall, suicides account for 1.4% of premature deaths worldwide. Differences arise between regions and countries with respect to the age, gender, and socioeconomic status of the individual and the respective country, method of suicide, and access to health care. During the second and third decades of life, suicide is the second leading cause of death. Completed suicides are three times more common in males than females; for suicide attempts, an inverse ratio can be found. Suicide attempts are up to 30 times more common compared to suicides; they are however important predictors of repeated attempts as well as completed suicides. Overall, suicide rates vary among the sexes and across lifetimes, whereas methods differ according to countries. The most commonly used methods are hanging, self-poisoning with pesticides, and use of firearms. The majority of suicides worldwide are related to psychiatric diseases. Among those, depression, substance use, and psychosis constitute the most relevant risk factors, but also anxiety, personality-, eating- and trauma-related disorders as well as organic mental disorders significantly add to unnatural causes of death compared to the general population. Overall, the matter at hand is relatively complex and a significant amount of underreporting is likely to be present. Nevertheless, suicides can, at least partially, be prevented by restricting access to means of suicide, by training primary care physicians and health workers to identify people at risk as well as to assess and manage respective crises, provide adequate follow-up care and address the way this is reported by the media. Suicidality represents a major societal and health care problem; it thus should be given a high priority in many realms.

Keywords

PsychiatryMedicineDepression (economics)Suicide preventionPoison controlSuicide methodsPopulationInjury preventionEpidemiologySocioeconomic statusAnxietyOccupational safety and healthMental healthEnvironmental healthSuicide rates

Affiliated Institutions

Related Publications

Depression in Ambulatory Medical Patients

Previous studies of medical outpatients have documented a high prevalence of depression that is often unrecognized by primary physicians. However, the subjective methodologies o...

1980 Archives of General Psychiatry 427 citations

Publication Info

Year
2018
Type
review
Volume
15
Issue
7
Pages
1425-1425
Citations
1313
Access
Closed

External Links

Social Impact

Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

1313
OpenAlex

Cite This

Silke Bachmann (2018). Epidemiology of Suicide and the Psychiatric Perspective. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health , 15 (7) , 1425-1425. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph15071425

Identifiers

DOI
10.3390/ijerph15071425