Author:
NEELEMAN JAN,WESSELY SIMON
Abstract
Background. The legal definition of suicide in
England and Wales (E & W) gives rise to a high proportion of open
verdicts and an underestimated suicide rate. We examined whether the
ratio between open and suicide verdicts in E & W has changed between
1974 and 1991 and whether it varies according to coroners'
qualifications.Methods. Temporal changes of the ratio of open and suicide
verdicts were examined using logistic regression adjusting for
confounders such as changing age and gender distributions of suicide
victims and the methods they use.Results. Adjusted for age at death and suicide method, the
ratio between open and suicide verdicts had, over successive 3-year
time periods, increased with a factor 1·21 (95% CI
1·20–1·23) for male and 1·15 (95% CI
1·14–1·17) for female deaths. Medical coroners
were 1·25 (1·08–1·44) times more likely
than non-medical coroners to return open rather than suicide
verdicts.Conclusions. As a likely result of factors in the death
registration system, the ratio between open and suicide verdicts has
increased substantially in E & W since the early 70s. In 1990 it was
higher than in any other comparable country. This has important
implications for comparisons of time trends in suicide between E &
W
and other countries.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Applied Psychology
Cited by
95 articles.
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