## Background: Deliberate self harm (dsh) in later life is under researched and is believed to be related to both mental illness and suicide. ## Aims: The aim of the study was to examine deliberate self-harm (dsh) in older people presenting to acute hospital services over three years. ## Method:
Deliberate self-poisoning and self-injury in older people
β Scribed by Keith Hawton; Joan Fagg
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1990
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 633 KB
- Volume
- 5
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0885-6230
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Patients aged 55 and over who were referred to a general hospital between 1976 and 1987 because of self-poisoning or self-injury were studied. The 675 individuals comprised 8.7% of suicide attempters of all ages. The mean annual rate of attempts in the 55-64 year age group was almost double that of the 65+ age group. In the younger age group the fema1e:male ratio of rates for the whole study period was 1.3, whereas in the older age group it was close to unity. Rates were highest in the divorced of both sexes and also high in single and widowed males. Married males had particularly low rates. Relatively few people were receiving psychiatric care at the time of their attempts. There was no evidence of any major change in rates of attempted suicide during the study period, unlike in younger people in whom rates have declined. However, there were changes in the substances used for self-poisoning, with a very marked decline in the use of barbiturates and increasing use of non-opiate analgesics, especially paracetamol. Repetition of attempts within one year of a first attempt during the study period occurred in nearly one in 10 cases.
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## Abstract ## Background Rates of suicide remain high among older people and those who deliberately self harm are believed to be at an increased risk of killing themselves in the future. If older people who deliberately harm themselves are to be helped by developments in services we need to under