BACKGROUND: Mortality, including suicide and accidents, is elevated in self-harm populations. Although risk factors for suicide following self-harm are often investigated, rarely have those for accidents been studied. Our aim was to compare risk factors for suicide and accidents. METHOD: A prospective cohort (n=30 202) from the Multicentre Study of Self-harm in England, 2000-2007, was followed up to 2010 using national death registers. Risk factors for suicide (intentional self-harm and undetermined intent) and accidents (narcotic poisoning, non-narcotic poisoning, and non-poisoning) following the last hospital presentation for self-harm were estimated using Cox models. RESULTS: During follow-up, 1833 individuals died, 378 (20.6%) by suicide and 242 (13.2%) by accidents. Independent predictors of both suicide and accidents were: male gender, age 35 years (except accidental narcotic poisoning) and psychiatric treatment (except accidental narcotic poisoning). Factors differentiating suicide from accident risk were previous self-harm, last method of self-harm (twofold increased risks for cutting and violent self-injury versus self-poisoning) and mental health problems. A risk factor specific to accidental narcotic poisoning was recreational/illicit drug problems, and a risk factor specific to accidental non-narcotic poisoning and non-poisoning accidents was alcohol involvement with self-harm. CONCLUSIONS: The similarity of risk factors for suicide and accidents indicates common experiences of socio-economic disadvantage, life problems and psychopathology resulting in a variety of self-destructive behaviour. Of factors associated with the accidental death groups, those for non-narcotic poisoning and other accidents were most similar to suicide; differences seemed to be related to criteria coroners use in reaching verdicts. Our findings support the idea of a continuum of premature death.
BACKGROUND: Mortality, including suicide and accidents, is elevated in self-harm populations. Although risk factors for suicide following self-harm are often investigated, rarely have those for accidents been studied. Our aim was to compare risk factors for suicide and accidents. METHOD: A prospective cohort (n=30 202) from the Multicentre Study of Self-harm in England, 2000-2007, was followed up to 2010 using national death registers. Risk factors for suicide (intentional self-harm and undetermined intent) and accidents (narcotic poisoning, non-narcotic poisoning, and non-poisoning) following the last hospital presentation for self-harm were estimated using Cox models. RESULTS: During follow-up, 1833 individuals died, 378 (20.6%) by suicide and 242 (13.2%) by accidents. Independent predictors of both suicide and accidents were: male gender, age 35 years (except accidental narcotic poisoning) and psychiatric treatment (except accidental narcotic poisoning). Factors differentiating suicide from accident risk were previous self-harm, last method of self-harm (twofold increased risks for cutting and violent self-injury versus self-poisoning) and mental health problems. A risk factor specific to accidental narcotic poisoning was recreational/illicit drug problems, and a risk factor specific to accidental non-narcotic poisoning and non-poisoning accidents was alcohol involvement with self-harm. CONCLUSIONS: The similarity of risk factors for suicide and accidents indicates common experiences of socio-economic disadvantage, life problems and psychopathology resulting in a variety of self-destructive behaviour. Of factors associated with the accidental death groups, those for non-narcotic poisoning and other accidents were most similar to suicide; differences seemed to be related to criteria coroners use in reaching verdicts. Our findings support the idea of a continuum of premature death.
Authors: Matthew J Carr; Darren M Ashcroft; Evangelos Kontopantelis; David While; Yvonne Awenat; Jayne Cooper; Carolyn Chew-Graham; Nav Kapur; Roger T Webb Journal: Ann Fam Med Date: 2017-05 Impact factor: 5.166
Authors: Florian Walter; Matthew J Carr; Pearl L H Mok; Aske Astrup; Sussie Antonsen; Carsten B Pedersen; Jenny Shaw; Roger T Webb Journal: JAMA Psychiatry Date: 2017-05-01 Impact factor: 21.596
Authors: Pauline Turnbull; Roger Webb; Nav Kapur; Caroline Clements; Helen Bergen; Keith Hawton; Jennifer Ness; Keith Waters; Ellen Townsend; Jayne Cooper Journal: BMC Psychiatry Date: 2015-10-19 Impact factor: 3.630
Authors: Deepak Prabhakar; Edward L Peterson; Yong Hu; Simran Chawa; Rebecca C Rossom; Frances L Lynch; Christine Y Lu; Beth E Waitzfelder; Ashli A Owen-Smith; L Keoki Williams; Arne Beck; Gregory E Simon; Brian K Ahmedani Journal: Crisis Date: 2020-11-05
Authors: Phillip Jones; David Gunnell; Stephen Platt; Jonathan Scourfield; Keith Lloyd; Peter Huxley; Ann John; Babar Kamran; Claudia Wells; Michael Dennis Journal: PLoS One Date: 2013-08-28 Impact factor: 3.240
Authors: Helen Bergen; Keith Hawton; Roger Webb; Jayne Cooper; Sarah Steeg; Matthew Haigh; Jennifer Ness; Keith Waters; Navneet Kapur Journal: JRSM Open Date: 2014-07-08