Psychotropic and other medicine use at time of death by suicide: a population‐level analysis of linked dispensing and forensic toxicology data

Author:

Chitty Kate M12ORCID,Buckley Nicholas A13,Lim Jessy1,Ali Zein1,Schumann Jennifer L456,Cairns Rose13,Daniels Benjamin7ORCID,Pearson Sallie A7,Preen David B2,Schaffer Andrea L8ORCID

Affiliation:

1. The University of Sydney Sydney NSW

2. The University of Western Australia Perth WA

3. Poisons Information Centre Children's Hospital at Westmead Sydney NSW

4. Victorian Institute of Forensic Medicine Monash University Melbourne VIC

5. Monash Addiction Research Centre Monash University Melbourne VIC

6. Monash University Melbourne VIC

7. The University of New South Wales Sydney NSW

8. The Bennett Institute of Applied Data Science University of Oxford Oxford United Kingdom

Abstract

AbstractObjectivesTo determine the numbers and types of medicines dispensed around the time of death to people who die by suicide; to compare the medicines recently dispensed and those recorded in post mortem toxicology reports.Design, setting, participantsAnalysis of linked National Coronial Information System (NCIS) and Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme (PBS) data from the Australian Suicide Prevention using Health Linked Data (ASHLi) study, a population‐based case series study of closed coronial cases for deaths of people in Australia aged ten years or more during 1 July 2013 – 10 October 2019 deemed by coroners to be the result of intentional self‐harm.Main outcome measuresProportions of people to whom medicines were dispensed around the time of death, by medicine group, class, and specific medicine; comparison of medicines recently dispensed and those detected by post mortem toxicology.ResultsToxicology reports were available for 13 541 of 14 206 people who died by suicide (95.3%; 10 246 men, 75.7%); poisoning with medicines contributed to 1163 deaths (8.6%). At least one PBS‐subsidised medicine had been dispensed around the time of death to 7998 people (59.1%). For three medicine classes, the proportions of people in whom the medicines were detected post mortem and their death was deemed medicine‐related were larger for those without records of recent dispensing than for people for whom they had been dispensed around the time of death: antidepressants (17.7% v 12.0%), anxiolytics (16.3% v 14.8%), and sedatives/hypnotics (24.3% v 16.5%). At least one recently dispensed medicine not detected post mortem was identified for 6208 people (45.8%).ConclusionsA considerable proportion of people who died by suicide were not taking psychotropic medicines recently dispensed to them, suggesting non‐adherence to pharmacotherapy, and a smaller than expected proportion were using antidepressants. Conversely, medicines that had not recently been dispensed were detected post mortem in many people for whom poisoning with medicines was a contributing factor, suggesting medicine stockpiling.

Funder

Cancer Institute NSW

National Health and Medical Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Medicine

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