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Suicide in Dublin : II. the influence of some social and medical factors on coroners' verdicts
Author(s)
Date Issued
1975
Date Available
2009-10-07T16:32:15Z
Abstract
This paper presents an analysis of the factors which influence coroners in their decision to classify some deaths as suicides and others as accidental or 'open'. The most important influence on coroners' behaviour was seen to be the manner by which the person died. Those who died by cutting, hanging, drugs or gas were significantly more likely to receive a suicide verdict than those whose deaths were due to drowning, jumping, shooting or poisoning. If the deceased left any intimation of a suicidal intent, this increased the likelihood that a suicide verdict would be returned. Finally, persons aged under 40 were significantly more likely to be returned as suicides than older victims, especially those aged over 70. All of these results show that coroners operate by observing the law as it defines suicide, that is, by looking for evidence of intent of self-inflicted death. Our findings concerning the factors associated with the suicide verdict help to clarify the meaning of the official data on suicides in Ireland, and illuminate the reasons why, using clinical rather than legal criteria, a much higher rate is obtained.
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Royal College of Psychiatrists
Journal
The British Journal of Psychiatry
Volume
126
Start Page
309
End Page
312
Copyright (Published Version)
1975, The Royal College of Psychiatrists
Subject – LCSH
Suicide--Ireland
Coroners--Ireland
Web versions
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
ISSN
0007-1250
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
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walshb_article_pub_026.pdf
Size
394.27 KB
Format
Adobe PDF
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9b7819a326e343e01a20951cc205e706
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