Affiliation:
1. Department of Psychiatry, University of Minnesota Medical School
Abstract
According to the statistical abstract of the United States for 1982–1983, there were 1,913,800 deaths in the United States in 1979 [1]. Twenty-seven thousand, or 1.4 percent of those deaths were by suicide, yielding a suicide rate of 11.9/100,000/year. The rate was highest (39.2/100,000) for white males sixty-five years and over and lowest (0.1/100,000) for black females between five and fourteen years. It is generally accepted that physical illness is a risk factor for suicide. If this is true, then in caring for persons with significant physical illness, physicians are dealing with a population at increased risk of suicide. In its opening section, this article will review the evidence that points to a positive correlation between suicide and physical illness. Next the association between specific illnesses, such as peptic ulcer and cancer, and suicide will be examined. Third, risk factors associated with the occurrence of suicide in medical-surgical hospitals will be reviewed. Fourth, the occurrence of suicide in relationship to medical procedures will be discussed. Fifth, the evaluation and management of suicidal patients in medical settings will be briefly considered. This review will not consider the relationship between physical illness and attempted suicide.
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health
Reference51 articles.
1. Statistical Abstract of the United States, 103rd edition, U.S. Department of Commerce, pp. 76–81, 1982–1983.
2. Cavan R. S., Suicide, The University of Chicago Press, Chicago, pp. 279–287, 1928.
3. Sainsbury P., Suicide in London, Basic Books, Inc., New York, pp. 81–82, 1956.
4. Study of Suicide in Philadelphia
5. ORGANIC DISEASE AND SUICIDE
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