Author:
Esscher Annika,Essén Birgitta,Innala Eva,Papadopoulos Fotios C.,Skalkidou Alkistis,Sundström-Poromaa Inger,Högberg Ulf
Abstract
BackgroundAlthough the incidence of suicide among women who have given birth during the past 12 months is lower than that of women who have not given birth, suicide remains one of the most common causes of death during the year following delivery in high-income countries, such as Sweden.AimsTo characterise women who died by suicide during pregnancy and postpartum from a maternal care perspective.MethodWe traced deaths (n= 103) through linkage of the Swedish Cause of Death Register with the Medical Birth and National Patient Registers. We analysed register data and obstetric medical records.ResultsThe maternal suicide ratio was 3.7 per 100 000 live births for the period 1980–2007, with small magnitude variation over time. The suicide ratio was higher in women born in low-income countries (odds ratio 3.1 (95% CI 1.3–7.7)). Violent suicide methods were common, especially during the first 6 months postpartum. In all, 77 women had received psychiatric care at some point, but 26 women had no documented psychiatric care. Antenatal documentation of psychiatric history was inconsistent. At postpartum discharge, only 20 women had a plan for psychiatric follow-up.ConclusionsSuicide prevention calls for increased clinical awareness and cross-disciplinary maternal care approaches to identify and support women at risk.
Publisher
Royal College of Psychiatrists
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health
Cited by
112 articles.
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