Publication | Closed Access
A Psychiatric Approach to the Diagnosis of Suicide and its Effect upon the Edinburgh Statistics
64
Citations
6
References
1973
Year
Psychological Co-morbiditiesEdinburgh StatisticsOpen VerdictsMental HealthPossible SuicidesPsychologySocial SciencesPsychiatric ApproachMood SymptomForensic MedicineStatisticsPsychiatryHomicideDepressionPsychiatric DisorderRecorded FiguresForensic PsychiatryEpidemiologyDeath InvestigationSuicideMedicinePsychopathology
Researchers agree that suicides are under-reported, although estimates of the extent vary. Dublin (1963) suggested that recorded figures were understated by one fourth to one third. Seager and Flood (1965) estimated that possible suicides among deaths reported as accidents, misadventure or open verdicts might be as many as 50 per cent of those actually returned as suicide. Important sources of under-reporting lie in the methods of ascertaining and recording suicide as well as in religious and social attitudes, which tend, in certain countries, to look upon suicide as a stigma and to avoid a verdict of suicide where possible.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1