Author:
Chang Chia-Ming,Liao Shih-Cheng,Chiang Hung-Chi,Chen Ying-Yeh,Tseng Kwan-Cho,Chau Yeuk-Lun,Chang Hsiu-Ju,Lee Ming-Been
Abstract
SummaryAll suicides (n=12 497) in Taiwan in 2001–2004 were identified from mortality records retrieved from the National Health Insurance Database. Altogether, 95.1% of females and 84.9% of males had been in contact with healthcare services in the year before their death. Females received significantly more diagnoses of psychiatric disorders (48.0% v. 30.2%) and major depression (17.8% v. 7.4%) than males. Such differences were consistent across different medical settings where contact with hospital-based non-psychiatric physicians was as common as with general practitioners (GPs). However, diagnoses of psychiatric disorders were underdiagnosed in both genders.
Publisher
Royal College of Psychiatrists
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health
Cited by
35 articles.
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