November 1, 2013

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Changes in coroners' practice may be compromising quality of suicide statistics

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Assessment of official suicide statistics found that between 1990 and 2005, the proportion of researcher-defined suicides given a verdict of suicide by the 12 coroners studied decreased by almost seven per cent, largely because of the increased use of misadventure/accident verdicts for deaths thought, on clinical review, to be suicides. Growth in the use of narrative verdicts by coroners may also have compromised assessment of small area differences in suicide rates. This is just one of the key findings from a report, published in the first issue of the new National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) journal Programme Grants for Applied Research, aimed at reducing premature mortality from suicide and non-fatal self-harm.

Suicide and are the most serious and devastating consequences of mental illness. More than 4,000 people take their lives every year in England and there are over 200,000 hospital presentations for self-harm annually.

Comprising findings from four linked studies led by the UK's leading experts in the field including University of Bristol academics, the report provides new evidence aimed at improving management of self-harm, reducing the incidence of and providing reliable data to evaluate the impact of the National Suicide Prevention Strategy for England (2002).

Key findings from the studies include:

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