Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- List of tables
- Chapter 1 Why illicit drug-related deaths matter
- Chapter 2 The global epidemiology of illicit drug use
- Chapter 3 Mortality amongst illicit drug users
- Chapter 4 Mortality and drug overdose
- Chapter 5 Illicit drug use and disease
- Chapter 6 Mortality and suicide
- Chapter 7 Mortality and trauma
- Chapter 8 Reducing drug-related mortality
- Chapter 9 Summary and conclusions
- References
- Index
Chapter 6 - Mortality and suicide
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 30 September 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- List of tables
- Chapter 1 Why illicit drug-related deaths matter
- Chapter 2 The global epidemiology of illicit drug use
- Chapter 3 Mortality amongst illicit drug users
- Chapter 4 Mortality and drug overdose
- Chapter 5 Illicit drug use and disease
- Chapter 6 Mortality and suicide
- Chapter 7 Mortality and trauma
- Chapter 8 Reducing drug-related mortality
- Chapter 9 Summary and conclusions
- References
- Index
Summary
Introduction
Despite its salience as a cause of death amongst illicit drug users, suicide has been a relatively neglected area of research in the drug and alcohol field. This is curious because, as noted previously, it has long been known that there are extremely high levels of depressive disorders amongst this population (Darke & Ross, 2001; Degenhardt et al., 2001; Dinwiddie et al., 1997; Teesson et al., 2005), and suicide is a leading cause of death amongst illicit drug users. Despite its status as a “hidden issue” of the illicit drug field, however, suicide presents a major clinical challenge to those treating drug-dependent users, and needs to be recognised as such. The current chapter examines rates of suicide, methods employed, and risk factors amongst the general population and illicit drug users. Both completed and attempted suicide are examined, representing two aspects of a single phenomenon.
Suicide amongst the general population
Rates of completed suicide in the general population vary greatly from country to country. For example, rates higher than 0.3 per thousand are reported in Finland, Hungary, and Sri Lanka compared to rates of approximately 0.1 per thousand in the US, UK, and Australia (Diekstra & Gulbinat, 1993; Hassan, 1995; Lynskey et al., 2000).
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Mortality amongst Illicit Drug UsersEpidemiology, Causes and Intervention, pp. 80 - 95Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2006