Suicide by Jumping

Author:

Beautrais Annette1

Affiliation:

1. Canterbury Suicide Project, University of Otago, Christchurch, New Zealand

Abstract

Abstract. Research on suicide by jumping is summarized. The incidence of suicide by this method varies but tends to be higher in cities, city states, or countries that have extensive high-rise housing. Most suicides by jumping occur from high-rise residential housing units. However, our knowledge about suicide by jumping tends to be limited to a small number of reports from sites, often bridges, which become well-known as places from which to take one's life. Media reports of newsworthy suicides from these sites appear to encourage imitative behavior. Prevention strategies have focused upon limiting suicides from iconic sites by surveillance, barriers, muted media reporting, and signage offering help and telephone hotlines. A small number of studies provides evidence that installing barriers at popular jumping sites reduces suicides from those sites. There are few reports of efforts to reduce suicides from high-rise residential buildings.

Publisher

Hogrefe Publishing Group

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health

Reference42 articles.

1. Aitken, P., Owens, C., Lloyd-Tomlins, S., FitzSimons, V., Emmens, T., Mattacott, H. (2006). Guidance on action to be taken at suicide hotspots. Retrieved 5 April 2007 from www.csip-plus.org.uk/RowanDocs/SuicideHotspots.pdf. England: Devon Partnership NHS, Peninsula Medical School, Care Services Improvement Partnership, Mental Health in England

2. Changes in rates of suicide by car exhaust asphyxiation in England and Wales

3. Beautrais, A.L. (in preparation). Removal and reinstallation of bridge barriers: Effectiveness for suicide prevention.

4. Effectiveness of Barriers at Suicide Jumping Sites: A Case Study

5. Firearms Legislation and Reductions in Firearm-Related Suicide Deaths in New Zealand

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