Hospital inpatient suicides: A retrospective comparison between psychiatric and non‐psychiatric inpatients in Milan healthcare facilities

Author:

Rucco Daniele1ORCID,Gentile Guendalina2,Tambuzzi Stefano2,Fanton Beatrice2,Calati Raffaella13ORCID,Zoja Riccardo2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology University of Milan‐Bicocca Milan Italy

2. Department of Biomedical Sciences for Health, Section of Legal Medicine and Insurance University of Milan Milan Italy

3. Department of Adult Psychiatry Nimes University Hospital Nimes France

Abstract

AbstractIntroductionInpatient suicide in hospitals is a worrying phenomenon that has received little attention. This study retrospectively explored the socio‐demographic, clinical, and suicide‐related characteristics of hospital inpatient suicides in Milan, Italy, which were collected at the Institute of Forensic Medicine during a twenty‐eight‐year period (1993–2020). In particular, this study compared the features of hospital inpatient suicides in patients with and without psychiatric diagnoses.MethodsData were collected through the historical archive, annual registers, and autopsy reports, in certified copies of the originals deposited with the prosecutors of the courts.ResultsConsidering the global sample, inpatients were mainly men (N = 128; 64.6%), with a mean age of 56.7 years (SD ± 19.8), of Italian nationality (N = 176; 88.9%), admitted to non‐psychiatric wards (N = 132; 66.7%), with a single illness (N = 111; 56.1%), treated with psychotropic medications (N = 101; 51%), who used violent suicide methods (N = 177; 89.4%), died of organic injuries (N = 156; 78.8%), and outside the buildings (N = 114; 72.7%). Comparing psychiatric and non‐psychiatric inpatients, suicide cases with a non‐psychiatric diagnosis were predominantly men (N = 48; 76.2%), hospitalized in non‐psychiatric wards (N = 62; 98.4%), assuming non‐psychotropic drugs (N = 37; 58.7%), and died in outside hospital spaces (N = 54; 85.7%).ConclusionsA fuller characterization of suicide among hospitalized inpatients requires systematic and computerized data gathering that provides for specific information. Indeed, this could be valuable for inpatient suicide prevention strategies as well as institutional policies.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Clinical Psychology

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