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Risk factors for repetition and suicide following self-harm in older adults: multicentre cohort study.

Murphy, Elizabeth; Kapur, Navneet; Webb, Roger; Purandare, Nitin; Hawton, Keith; Bergen, Helen; Waters, Keith; Cooper, Jayne

The British journal of psychiatry. 2012;200(5):399.

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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Older adults have elevated suicide rates. Self-harm is the most important risk factor for suicide. There are few population-based studies of self-harm in older adults. AIMS: To calculate self-harm rates, risk factors for repetition and rates of suicide following self-harm in adults aged 60 years and over. METHOD: We studied a prospective, population-based self-harm cohort presenting to six general hospitals in three cities in England during 2000 to 2007. RESULTS: In total 1177 older adults presented with self-harm and 12.8% repeated self-harm within 12 months. Independent risk factors for repetition were previous self-harm, previous psychiatric treatment and age 60-74 years. Following self-harm, 1.5% died by suicide within 12 months. The risk of suicide was 67 times that of older adults in the general population. Men aged 75 years and above had the highest suicide rates. CONCLUSIONS: Older adults presenting to hospital with self-harm are a high-risk group for subsequent suicide, particularly older men.

Bibliographic metadata

Type of resource:
Content type:
Publication type:
Publication form:
Published date:
ISSN:
Place of publication:
England
Volume:
200
Issue:
5
Start page:
399
Digital Object Identifier:
10.1192/bjp.bp.111.094177
Pubmed Identifier:
22157801
Pii Identifier:
bjp.bp.111.094177
Access state:
Active

Record metadata

Manchester eScholar ID:
uk-ac-man-scw:163734
Created by:
Donaldson, Iain
Created:
27th June, 2012, 15:58:07
Last modified by:
Donaldson, Iain
Last modified:
26th October, 2015, 15:14:55

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