| Literature DB >> 23575389 |
Thilini Rajapakse1, Kathleen Margaret Griffiths, Helen Christensen.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The rate of non-fatal self-poisoning in Sri Lanka has increased in recent years, with associated morbidity and economic cost to the country. This review examines the published literature for the characteristics and factors associated with non-fatal self-poisoning in Sri Lanka.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23575389 PMCID: PMC3637511 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-13-331
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Figure 1Flow diagram for literature search and review.
Sri Lankan studies on attempted self-poisoning included in this review
| 1 | Fleischmann et al. 2005 [ | RCT of brief intervention following attempted suicide | 1067 | Demographic features, methods used and outcomes |
| 2 | Bertolote et al. 2010 [ | Same study as above | TAU: 149 BIC: 151 | Rate of repetition of attempted suicide at 18 months |
| 3 | Seneviratne et al. 1999 [ | Case control | 168 cases | Demographic features, psychiatric morbidity |
| 4 | Van Der Hoek et al. 2005 [ | Case control | 253 cases**of which 84% was intentional | Demographic features, types of poisons, risk factors |
| 5 | Fernando [ | Subjects: patients hospitalized after poisoning | 101 | Demographic characteristics, poisons used |
| 6 | Chandrasena 1981 [ | Subjects: patients hospitalized after poisoning | 64 | Demographic characteristics, poisons used, psychiatric morbidity |
| 7 | Jeyaratnam et al. 1987 [ | Residents in the study area who had a history of hospital admission for poisoning + farmers in agricultural communities in 4 South Asian countries | 94 (in Sri Lanka)**of which 36.2% was intentional | Types of pesticides used ingested, awareness among consumers of health hazards of pesticides |
| 8 | Hettiarachchi et al. 1989 [ | Patients hospitalized due to self-poisoning in South Sri Lanka. | 97 | Demographic features, types of poisons, reasons for choice of poison and where obtained |
| 9 | Hettiarachchi et al. 1989 [ | Same study as above | 97 | Intent, triggers, psychiatric morbidity |
| 10 | Eddleston et al. 2005 [ | Patients hospitalized after self-poisoning, in a rural agricultural area, over one year | 2189 | Demographic characteristics, type of poisons ingested |
| 11 | Eddleston et al. 2006 [ | Subjects: patients hospitalized after self-poisoning (opportunistic sample) | 268 | Reasons for choice of poison, outcome, expected outcome, premeditation |
| 12 | De Silva et al. 2008 [ | Inpatients after self-poisoning (Colombo region) | 191 | Demographic characteristics, types of poisons ingested |
| 13 | Fahim et al. 2010 [ | Inpatients after self poisoning (Polonnaruwa & Peradeniya regions) | 816 | Rate of previous self-harm |
| 14 | Dawson et al. 2010 [ | Patients admitted to two rural hospitals after deliberate ingestion of a single pesticide, from 2002 to 2008. | 9302 | Demographic features, type of pesticide ingested |
| 15 | Senewiratne et al. 1974 [ | Records of all inpatients treated at Kandy Hospital for acute poisoning, in 1970 and 1971 | 472* *of which 82% was intentional | Rates of attempted poisoning, demographic features, types of poisons ingested |
| 16 | Dissanayake et al. 1974 [ | Police records 1970–72, of the Police Post, General Hospital, Colombo region + Case notes of admissions for poisoning to Colombo Hospital 1970-72 | 270**of which 49% was intentional104 (non-random sample) | Demographic features (age and gender) |
| 17 | Jeyaratnam et al. 1982 [ | Randomly selected hospital records of patients discharged with a diagnosis of pesticide poisoning, from hospitals throughout Sri Lanka | 1000 | Rates of poisoning, demographic features, types of poisons ingested |
| 18 | Senanayake et al. 1986 [ | Hospital admissions for acute poisonings in hospitals in selected areas of Sri Lanka (Peradeniya, Colombo, Galle and Jaffna regions) | Peradeniya-179 Galle-100 Colombo- 101 Jaffna- 446 | Demographic features, types of poisons ingested, associated illness |
| 19 | Hettiarachchi et al. 1989 [ | Records of patients hospitalized due to non-fatal poisoning over a 1 year (1986–7) (South Sri Lanka) | 669**of which 73% was intentional | Prevalence rates, demographic features, types of poisons, case fatality. |
| 20 | Eddleston et al. 1999 [ | Hospital records of patients treated for self ingestion of oleander plant (1995–96) + Assessment of inpatients after oleander ingestion | 415 79 | Demographic features, triggers for self-poisoning |
| 21 | De Silva et al. 2000 [ | Hospital records of patients hospitalized due to parasuicide in Kandy, Peradeniya, Kurunegala and Matale regions during 1993–94. | 5036* *of which >80% was intentional | Demographic features, type of poisons ingested |
| 22 | Van Der Hoek et al. 2006 [ | Hospital records of patients hospitalized due to poisoning, in South Sri Lanka, from 1990–2002. | 8110**of which 64% was intentional | Demographic features, rates of poisoning, type of poisons ingested |
| 23 | Manuel et al. 2008 [ | Hospital records of patients admitted due to self-poisoning in rural south Sri Lanka + selected economic indices of that area | 844 | Rates of attempted poisoning, associations with socioeconomic indices |
| 24 | Senadheera et al. 2010 [ | Hospital records of children & adolescents admitted to Hospital in South Sri Lanka (Karapitiya region), due to deliberate self-harm | 827**of which 99% was due to attempted self-poisoning | Demographic features, types of substances ingested, change of substances ingested with time |
| 25 | Van Der Hoek et al. 1998 [ | Mixed methods-Retrospective analysis of hospital records for information on occurrence of pesticide poisoning in the area + Qualitative interviews of families living in a village in a rural agricultural area | 526**of which 68% was intentional | |
| 26 | Konradsen et al. 2006 [ | Qualitative interviews with those who have attempted intentional self-poisoning, key workers in the area and focus group discussions with those from that community. | 159 | Exploration of factors and triggers associated with attempted self-poisoning (particularly sociological aspects). |
Rates of self-poisoning (per 100,000 population) – pesticides only
| Jeyaratnam et al. 1982 [ | 1979 | Sri Lanka (nationwide) | 79/100,000**of which 73% was due to intentional self-poisoning |
| Van Der Hoek et al. 1998 [ | 1991-94 | North-Central Province | 260/100,000 per year to 290/100,000 per year**of which 68% was due to intentional self-poisoning |
| Van Der Hoek et al. 2005 [ | 1999 | Uda Walawe region | 163/100,000**of which 84% was due to intentional self-poisoning |
Rates for intentional self-poisoning (per 100,000 population) – for any type of substances including pesticides
| Senewiratne et al. 1974 [ | 1971-2 | Kandy region | 26.2 /100,000**of which 82% due to intentional self-poisoning. |
| Hettiarachchi et al. 1989 [ | 1986-87 | Galle region | 54.7/100,000 (all due to intentional self-poisoning) |
| Van Der Hoek et al. 2006 [ | 1990-2002 Rate for year 2002 | Southern Sri Lanka | 318 per 100,000*of which 64% were due to intentional self-poisoning 350/100,000**of which 64% were due to intentional self-poisoning |
| Manuel et al. 2008 [ | 2002 | Southern Sri Lanka | 315/100,000 (all due to intentional self-poisoning). |
Types of poison ingested by males and females (studies listed in order of the year in which study was carried out, oldest first)
| Senewiratne et al. 1974 [ | 1970-1971 Kandy region | Pesticides | Pesticides | Medicinal overdose | Medicinal overdose |
| Chandrasena et al. 1981 [ | 1976 Kandy region | Pesticides | Pesticides | Medicinal overdose | Medicinal overdose |
| Fernando et al. 1977 [ | 1976 Colombo region | Pesticides (for both genders) | Medicinal overdose (for both genders) | ||
| Senanayake et al.1986 [ | 1984 Peradeniya, Colombo, Galle, Jaffna regions | Pesticides | Pesticides | Medicinal overdose | Medicinal overdose |
| Hettiarachchi et al. 1989 [ | 1986-1987 Galle region | Pesticides | Pesticides | Kerosene | Kerosene |
| Hettiarachchi et al. 1989 [ | 1989 Galle region | Pesticides | Pesticides | Medicinal overdose | Medicinal overdose |
| De Silva 2000 [ | 1987-1991 Central Sri Lanka | Pesticides (for both genders) | - | - | |
| Seneviratne et al. 1999 [ | 1996-1997 Ragama region | Pesticides (for both genders) | Medicinal overdose (for both genders) | ||
| Van Der Hoek et al. 2006 [ | 1990-2002 Ratnapura, Monaragala, Hambanthota regions | Pesticides | Household products (mostly kerosene derivatives) | Pesticides | Household products (mostly kerosene derivatives) |
| Eddleston et al. 2005 [ | 2002-2003 Anuradhapura, Polonnaruwa regions | Pesticides | Pesticides | Oleander (plant) | Oleander (plant) |
| Fleischmann et al. 2005 [ | 2002- 2004 Colombo region | Pesticides | Medicinal overdose | Medicinal overdose | Pesticides |
| Senadheera et al. 2010 [ | 2001-2007 Galle region | Pesticides and other poisons (e.g. kerosene, household poisons) | Medicinal overdoses | | |
| Fahim et al. 2010 [ | 2005-2007 Peradeniya & Polonnaruwa regions | Pesticides | Oleander (plant) | Pesticides | Oleander (plant) |
| De Silva et al. 2008 [ | 2007 Colombo region | Medicinal overdose | Medicinal overdoses | Pesticides | Pesticides |
Rates of psychiatric illness and alcohol use in those who have attempted self-poisoning
| Fernando 1977 [ | Participants interviewed as part of the study. Further details of psychiatric assessment not available. | • Psychiatric illness: 15.9% (this included schizophrenia, depression and mental retardation) |
| Chandrasena 1981 [ | Participants interviewed as part of the study. Further details of psychiatric assessment not available. | • Psychiatric illness – 13% |
| • Alcoholism – 2% | ||
| Senanayake et al. 1986 [ | Information based on administrative records. | • Psychiatric illness - 5% (in Jaffna region) & 2.3% (in Peradeniya region) |
| • Alcohol consumption at time of poisoning: 4% (in Peradeniya region) | ||
| Hettiarachchi et al. 1989 [ | Participants interviewed as part of the study. Further details of psychiatric assessment not available. | • Psychiatric illness – 13.4% (Depression and schizophrenia present in equal numbers, in 77% of psychiatric illness) |
| • Alcoholism - 7% | ||
| Seneviratne et al. 1999 [ | A psychiatric assessment of each participant was conducted by a specialist psychiatrist. | • Depression – 18.5% |
| • Schizophrenia – 1.2% | ||
| • Alcoholism – 10.7% | ||
| Eddleston et al. 1999 [ | Participants interviewed as part of the study. No formal psychiatric assessment. | • Alcohol intoxicated at the time of self-poisoning: 50% of male participants |
| De Silva et al. 2000 [ | Data obtained from hospital records. | • Use of alcohol before/during self-poisoning: 6% |
| Van Der Hoek et al. 2005 [ | A small subsample of the study population was assessed using a questionnaire based on the Composite Diagnostic Interview Short Form (CIDI-SF). | • Alcohol dependence is significantly associated with increased risk of self-poisoning. |
| • No significant association between depression and self-poisoning (sub sample) | ||
| • Alcohol intoxicated at time of self-poisoning: 36% | ||
| Konradsen et al. 2006 [ | Based on interviews and focus group discussions. | • Life threatening illness or disability or mental illness– 8% |
| • Alcohol intoxicated at time of self-poisoning: 32% (all males) |