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Copyright World Psychiatric Association Suicide and psychiatric diagnosis: a worldwide perspective 1Department of Mental Health and Substance Dependence, World Health Organization, Geneva, Switzerland This article has been cited by other articles in PMC.The World Health Organization (WHO) compiles and disseminates data on mortality
and morbidity reported by its Member States, according to one of its mandates.
Since the WHO's inception in 1948, the number of Member States has grown continually
and so has the WHO mortality data bank. From 11 countries reporting data on
mortality in 1950, the number of countries involved increased to 74 in the
year 1985. More than 100 Member States reported on mortality at some point
in time. Data from developed countries (mostly in the North of Europe and of America,
and a few countries of the Western Pacific Region) are received on a mostly
regular basis. Most developing countries (in Latin America, Asia and in the
Eastern Mediterranean Region) report on an irregular basis; very few countries
in Africa regularly report on mortality to WHO. Deaths associated with suicide are an integral part of the WHO mortality
data bank. Throughout consecutive editions of the International Classification
of Diseases (ICD-6 to ICD-10), the category name and code of suicide have
remained relatively stable. Suicide data are reported in absolute numbers
along with the mid-year population of a country. The suicide rates are usually
represented by country, year, sex, and age group. The most recent data available
to the WHO can be accessed through its web site (www.who.int). The official figures made available to WHO by its Member States are based
on death certificates signed by legally authorized personnel, usually doctors
and, to a lesser extent, police officers. Generally speaking, these professionals
do not misrepresent the information. However, suicide may be hidden and underreported
for several reasons, e.g. as a result of prevailing social or religious attitudes.
In some places, it is believed that suicide is underreported by a percentage
between 20% and 100%. This underlines the importance of bringing about corrections
and improvement on a world wide basis. In contrast to data on completed suicide, no country in the world reports
to WHO official statistics on attempted suicide (and most probably countries
do not collect them), which makes it impossible to relate national trends
of suicide to national trends of attempted suicide. In the absence of national
data, one is forced to rely on local studies, which vary considerably, for
instance in terms of the operational definition of attempted suicide. The
WHO/EURO Multicentre Study on Suicidal Behaviour (1)
constitutes a major step forward in this area. EPIDEMIOLOGICAL CONSIDERATIONS According to calculations based on data reported to WHO by its Member States,
in 1998 suicide represented 1.8% of the global burden of disease and it is
expected to increase to 2.4% by the year 2020. Suicide is among the 10 leading
causes of death for all ages in most of the countries for which information
is available. In some countries, it is among the top three causes of death
for people aged 15-34 years. In the year 2020, approximately 1.53 million people will die from suicide
based on current trends and according to WHO estimates. Ten to 20 times more
people will attempt suicide worldwide (2).
This represents on average one death every 20 seconds and one attempt every
1-2 seconds. The highest suicide rates for both men and women are found in Europe, more
particularly in Eastern Europe, in a group of countries that share similar
historical and sociocultural characteristics, such as Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania
and, to a lesser extent, Finland, Hungary and the Russian Federation. Nevertheless,
some similarly high rates are found in countries that are quite distinct in
relation to these characteristics, such as Sri Lanka and Cuba. According to the WHO regional distribution, the lowest rates as a whole
are found in the Eastern Mediterranean Region, which comprises mostly countries
that follow Islamic traditions; this is also true of some Central Asian republics
that had formerly been integrated into the Soviet Union. Curiously enough,
when the data are separated by WHO region, the highest rates in each region,
with the exception of Europe, are found in island countries, such as Cuba,
Japan, Mauritius and Sri Lanka. In Figure Figure1,1
The increase in these global suicide rates must be interpreted with caution.
On the one hand, it might reflect the fact that since the end of the USSR
(which had an overall rate below the average), some of its former republics
(particularly those with the highest rates in the world) started to report
individually, thus inflating the global rate. On the other hand, figures for
1950 were based on 11 countries only, and this gradually increased up to 1995,
when the estimates were based on 62 countries that reported on suicide. These
62 countries as a whole probably have higher rates, are more concerned with
them and have a higher tendency to report on suicide mortality than countries
where suicide is not perceived as a major public health problem. Although it is customary in the suicidology literature to present total
rates of suicide for both men and women combined, it should be noted that
the current general epidemiological practice is to present rates according
to sex and age, particularly when important differences (in terms of figures
or risk factors) across sex or age groups exist. This is precisely the situation
in relation to suicide; suicide rates of men and women are consistently different
in most places, as are rates in different age groups. Figure Figure11 There is a clear tendency for suicide rates to increase with age (Figure (Figure2).2
In spite of the wide and appropriate use of rates, the information conveyed
by them alone can be misleading, particularly when comparing data across countries
or regions with important differences in the demographic structure. As indicated
earlier, the highest suicide rates are currently reported in Eastern Europe;
however, the largest numbers of suicides are found in Asia. Given the size
of their population, almost 30% of all cases of suicide worldwide are committed
in China and India alone, although the suicide rate of China practically coincides
with the global average and that of India is almost half of the global suicide
rate. The number of suicides in China alone is 30% greater than the total
number of suicides in the whole of Europe, and the number of suicides in India
alone (the second highest) is equivalent to those in the four European countries
with the highest number of suicides together (Russia, Germany, France and
Ukraine). Given the relatively narrow differences in the population of males and
females in each age group, the large predominance of suicide rates among males
is also found in relation to the actual number of suicides committed. It is in relation to age, however, that the most striking changes are perceived
when we move from rates to total numbers. Although suicide rates can be between
six and eight times higher among the elderly, as compared with young people,
currently more young people than elderly people are dying from suicide, globally
speaking. Currently, more suicides (55%) are committed by people aged 5-44
years than by people aged 45 years and older (Figure (Figure3).3
This shift in the predominance of numbers of suicide from the elderly to
young people is a new phenomenon. It becomes dramatic when one considers that
the proportion of the elderly in the total population is increasing at a greater
rate than the one of younger people. Also, it is not the result of a divergent
modification in suicide rates in these age groups: the suicide rate in young
people is increasing at a greater pace than it is in the elderly. SUICIDE AND MENTAL DISORDERS The presence of a mental disorder is an important risk factor for suicide.
It is generally acknowledged that over 90% of those who committed suicide
had a psychiatric diagnosis at the time of death. In order to discuss the implications of psychiatric diagnosis for suicide
prevention, we have undertaken a systematic review of studies reporting diagnoses
of mental disorders. Preliminary findings are to be found elsewhere (4,5). The review included 31 papers, published between 1959 and 2001 world wide.
In total, 15,629 cases of suicide in the general population (above the age
of 10 years, both sexes) were identified. Papers focusing only on specific
age groups, such as young people or the elderly, or only on specific disorders,
such as depression or schizophrenia, were excluded; usually these studies
included a rather small sample size. All studies retained refer to people
with or without history of admission to mental hospitals (47.5% versus 52.5%,
respectively). The diagnostic methods included both diagnoses established
while the person was still alive and post-mortem diagnoses based on e.g. psychological
autopsies (6). All diagnoses of mental
disorders were made on the basis of ICD (8, 9 or 10) or DSM (III, IIIR or
IV) and converted to general categories common to both systems. It is noteworthy that the geographical and cultural representation of the
cases was limited, since 82.1% of the cases originated from Europe and North
America, whereas cases of Asian countries (including Australia and New Zealand)
constituted the remaining part. The overall results showed that 98% of those who committed suicide had
a diagnosable mental disorder, and in this paper we will concentrate on the
differences between the psychiatric diagnoses of general populations and of
populations which had been admitted to mental hospitals. Out of the 15,629
cases reviewed, 7,424 cases (47.5%) had been admitted at least once to a psychiatric
hospital or ward (heretofore designated as PIP), whereas there was no indication
of this type of admission in 8,205 cases (52.5%), heretofore designated as
GP. Table 1 shows the distribution of
the diagnoses found in all cases. It should be noted that in some studies
on GP (but in none on PIP) multiple diagnoses were established, thus making
the number of diagnoses greater than the number of cases.
Unsurprisingly, a psychiatric diagnosis was made in the majority of people
who committed suicide; in 3.2% of the cases of GP and in 0.1% of PIP a psychiatric
diagnosis was not established, which leaves it open whether there were no
good conditions or information for the establishment of a psychiatric diagnosis
or whether the person did not actually have a diagnosable mental disorder. Apart from the predominance of mood disorders in both groups (however,
with an important difference between them), there are major differences in
the prevalence of psychiatric diagnoses across these two groups, as highlighted
below (Figures (Figures44
IMPLICATIONS FOR PREVENTION The data presented above clearly point out the appropriateness of the treatment
of mental disorders as a major component of suicide prevention programmes.
However, on the one hand, suicide is found associated with a variety of mental
disorders, each one of them with a different therapeutic approach, thus making
a 'blanket approach' probably unsound. On the other hand, no single mental
disorder is found in association with suicide with such a magnitude as to
have any significant impact in national suicide rates, should its treatment
be even at an impossible 100% of effectiveness. Although the data presented here included all the studies found in the
whole scientific literature in English, through the methodology described
earlier on, more than 80% of the cases come from three countries only, namely
Denmark, UK and USA. It is quite possible that a different diagnostic distribution
be found in other countries or regions. Actually, there are indications that
in the Baltic region alcohol-related disorders have a stronger association
with suicide than in other regions (7)
and that in Asia less suicides are associated with depression, in comparison
with Western countries (8,9). According to these authors, in Asian countries there are
more suicides of the impulsive type, committed within hours of the triggering
factor, than what is usually seen in industrialized countries. Therefore, a sound suicide prevention strategy should definitely include
the treatment of the disorders most fre- quently associated with suicide,
on a local basis. In the absence of the relevant information, it should include
the treatment of at least schizophrenia, depression and alcohol- related disorders
as a main component, but should not overlook other components more dependent
on the social and physical environment, as proposed by the WHO human-ecological
approach (10). According to this approach, other actions to prevent suicide include:
At any rate, suicide remains a major public health problem, nevertheless
preventable, and action for its prevention calls for a coordinated multisectoral
approach. In view of the close association between suicide and mental disorders,
psychiatrists are in a particularly strategic position to lead effective suicide
prevention programmes. References 1. Schmidtke A, Bille-Brahe U, De Leo D, et al., editors. Suicidal behaviour in Europe: results from the WHO/EURO multicentre
study on suicidal behaviour. Bern: Hogrefe & Huber; 2001. 2. World Health Organization. Figures and facts about suicide. Geneva: World Health Organization; 1999. 3. Phillips MR. Li X. Zhang Y. Suicide rates in China, 1995–99. Lancet. 2002;359:835–840. [PubMed] 4. Bertolote JM. Fleischmann A. Suicide rates in China. Lancet. 2002;359:2274. [PubMed] 5. Bertolote JM. Fleischmann A. Suicide and mental disorders in the general population. Submitted for publication. 6. Beskow J. Runeson B. Asgard U. Psychological autopsies: methods and ethics. Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior. 1990;20:307–323. [PubMed] 7. Wasserman D. Värnik A. Suicide-preventive effects of perestroika in the former USSR:
the role of alcohol restriction. Acta Psychiatr Scand. 1998;98(Suppl. 394):1–4. [PubMed] 8. Phillips MR. Suicide rates in China. Lancet. 2002;359:2274. 9. Vijayakumar L. Rajkumar S. Are risk factors for suicide universal? A case-control study
in India. Acta Psychiatr. Scand. 1999;99:407–411. [PubMed] 10. World Health Organization. Primary prevention of mental, neurological and psychosocial disorders. Geneva: World Health Organization; 1998. |
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Lancet. 2002 Jun 29; 359(9325):2274; author reply 2274-5.
[Lancet. 2002]Suicide Life Threat Behav. 1990 Winter; 20(4):307-23.
[Suicide Life Threat Behav. 1990]Acta Psychiatr Scand. 1998 Jul; 98(1):1-13.
[Acta Psychiatr Scand. 1998]Acta Psychiatr Scand. 1999 Jun; 99(6):407-11.
[Acta Psychiatr Scand. 1999]