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The British Journal of Psychiatry 174: 259-265 (1999)
© 1999 The Royal College of Psychiatrists

Psychotropics and suicide prevention. Implications from toxicological screening of 5281 suicides in Sweden 1992-1994

G Isacsson, P Holmgren, H Druid and U Bergman
Department of Clinical Neuroscience and Family Medicine, Huddinge University Hospital, Sweden. Goran.Isacsson@cnsf.ki.se

BACKGROUND: Systematic clinical investigations of consecutive suicides have found psychiatric disorders in 90-95% of subjects (depressive disorder 30-87%). AIMS: To investigate use of psychotropics in men and women of different ages who commit suicide. METHOD: Results of toxicological screening in 5281 suicides in Sweden 1992-94 were studied. RESULTS: Psychotropics were detected in 45.3% of the suicides. Antidepressants were detected in 12.4% of the men and 26.2% of the women (7.2% and 14.2%, respectively, of those under 30 years of age). Neuroleptics or antiepileptics (in the absence of antidepressants) were detected in 8.3%, and anxiolytics/hypnotics alone in 20.5% of the subjects. Overdose by an antidepressant was the probable cause of death in 2.1% of the men and 7.9% of the women. CONCLUSIONS: The pattern of psychotropics detected in toxicology was incongruent with the pattern of diagnoses found in the clinical investigations of suicides mentioned above. Depression appears to be under treated in individuals committing suicide, especially in men and in subjects under 30 years of age.


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Copyright © 1999 The Royal College of Psychiatrists.