The British Journal of Psychiatry (2006) 189: 278-279. doi: 10.1192/bjp.bp.105.018671
© 2006 The Royal College of Psychiatrists
Physical vulnerability and fatal self-harm in the elderly
Michael Eddleston
South Asian Clinical Toxicology Research Collaboration, Centre for
Tropical Medicine, Nuffield Department of Clinical Medicine, University of
Oxford, UK and Ox - Col Collaboration, Department of Clinical Medicine,
University of Colombo, Sri Lanka
Mathisha Dissanayake and
M. H. Rezvi Sheriff
Ox - Col Collaboration, Department of Clinical Medicine, University of
Colombo, Sri Lanka
David A. Warrell
Centre for Tropical Medicine, Nuffield Department of Clinical Medicine,
University of Oxford
David Gunnell
Department of Social Medicine, University of Bristol, UK
Correspondence:
Dr M. Eddleston, SPIB, Royal Infirmary, Little France Crescent, Edinburgh EH16
4SA, UK. Email:
eddlestonm{at}eureka.lk
Declaration of interest None.
Funding detailed in Acknowledgements.

ABSTRACT
Although the high rate of suicide in elderly people is conventionally
explained as being due to greater intent to die, we have noted
elderly Sri
Lankans dying after relatively mild poisoning.
Using data from cases of yellow
oleander poisoning, we investigated
the effect of age on outcome in 1697
patients, controlling
for gender and amount ingested. In fully adjusted
models, people
over 64 years old were13.8 (95% CI 3.6-53.0) times more likely
to die than those less than 25 years old. The high number of
suicides in
elderly people globally is likely to be due, in
part, to the difficulty they
face in surviving the effects
of both the poisoning and its treatment.

INTRODUCTION
Fatal self-harm is a global problem responsible for around 1
million deaths
each year (
World Health Organization,
2001;
Krug et al,
2002). In most countries the highest incidence
is in elderly
people, in part because self-harm is more often
fatal in this age group
(
Spicer & Miller, 2000;
Miller et al, 2004;
Muhlberg et al, 2005).
The high incidence is commonly explained
by elderly people using larger
amounts of poison or more lethal
methods, and being more intent on dying,
owing to chronic illness
and social isolation
(
Harwood & Jacoby, 2000;
Conwell et al, 2002;
Krug et al, 2002).
One contributor to the age-related pattern of fatal self-harm that is
little discussed is the physical vulnerability of elderly people
(Conwell et al, 2002).
Elderly people may die more often than young people after self-harm because
their bodies may be unable to cope with either the act or its treatment. It
has so far been difficult to assess this vulnerability while controlling for
severity of the attempt, since data on (for example) the height jumped from or
the number of tablets ingested as markers of severity are not readily
available.
The most common single poison taken for self-harm in Sri Lanka is yellow
oleander (Thevetia peruviana) seeds (Eddleston et al,
1999,
2005a). Compared with
other poisons, oleander seeds are highly toxic in small quantities. Most
patients take between one and seven seeds and on admission find it easy to
recall exactly how many they have ingested. Since it is therefore possible to
quantify the number of seeds ingested, and thereby control for the severity of
the attempt, we have been able to use oleander seed poisoning to look at the
effect of age on outcome, independent of the act's severity. We have recruited
over 1900 oleander-poisoned patients to a cohort study that has allowed us to
address the issue of physical vulnerability in selfharming elderly people.

METHOD
All patients admitted to the adult medical wards of Anuradhapura
or
Polonnaruwa general hospitals were seen on admission and
managed following a
standard protocol. The number of seeds
ingested, possible confounders, and
outcome were recorded prospectively
by study doctors. We used the program
Stata (release 8.0 for
Windows) for analyses. A randomised controlled trial of
superactivated
charcoal was nested within this cohort until the trial's
termination
on 16 October 2004, when no effect of charcoal on outcome was
noted (
Eddleston et al,
2005b). Ethics approval was received
from Colombo, Sri
Lanka, and Oxfordshire, UK, research ethics
committees.

RESULTS
Between 31 March 2002 and 22 October 2004, a sample of 1939
patients
poisoned with oleander were recruited to the cohort
(age range 12-77 years,
median 21 years); 1021 (52.7%) of them
were male. The number of seeds ingested
was reported by 1697
(87.5%) patients and varied from 0.25 to 30 (median 3.0,
interquartile
range 2-5). Men ingested more seeds than women (median 3.5
v.
3.0) and older people ingested more seeds than younger people
(median number of seeds ingested 3.5 by those aged under 25
years
v.
4.5 by those aged 45 years and over; Spearman's rank
correlation between age
and seed number
r=0.18,
P<0.001).
Ninety-four of the 1939 patients (4.8%) died. The female case fatality was
lower than the male case fatality (3.9% v. 5.7%; OR=0.68, 95% CI
0.44-1.04). In gender-adjusted logistic regression models restricted to the
1697 cases with data on seed number, the risk of death increased with age
(OR=1.40, 95% CI 1.18-1.66, for every 10-year increase in age). Additionally
controlling for the number of seeds ingested, the odds ratio of death for
every 10-year increase in age was slightly attenuated (OR=1.32, 95% CI
1.10-1.58) in age (Fig. 1). The
odds ratio of death for people over the age of 65 years was 13.8 (95% CI
3.6-53.0) compared with people under the age of 25 years.
In age- and gender-adjusted models, the number of seeds ingested
was
independently associated with risk of death: OR for every
additional seed
ingested, 1.21 (95% CI 1.14-1.28). Associations
were unaffected in models
controlling for whether or not the
patient took part in the randomised trial
or the treatment
received.

DISCUSSION
Although the literature on fatal self-harm in elderly people
always
discusses their high intent to die (
Harwood
& Jacoby, 2000;
de Leo,
2001;
Krug et al,
2002), these people's relative physical
vulnerability to the act
of self-harm and to its treatment
is only rarely mentioned
(
Conwell et al, 2002).
We have noted
many elderly people dying in Sri Lanka from pesticides and
oleander
seeds who reported ingesting relatively small amounts. However,
we
are unaware of any previous empirical study of their greater
vulnerability to
the effects of self-poisoning, controlling
for the quantity of poison
ingested. Using the example of yellow
oleander poisoning, we show in this
study that the excess deaths
among elderly people, when controlled for the
amount of poison
ingested and therefore the severity of the act, is due in
part
to their increased frailty. Some of the vulnerability may result
from
comorbid illnesses such as ischaemic heart disease, which
would make the use
of atropine (the conventional treatment
for oleander poisoning) more
hazardous. Another reason might
be that the lower body weight of elderly
people and/or their
reduced elimination of poisons result in higher
concentrations.
There are two main limitations to our analysis. First, inaccuracies in the
reported number of seeds ingested will limit our ability to control fully for
the effect of severity (as measured by the quantity of oleander seeds
consumed), leading to an over-estimate of the effect of age. Nevertheless,
seed number was associated with case-fatality, and controlling for seed number
in our model only slightly (by 20%) attenuated the associations we observed.
Furthermore, unlike self-poisoning with pharmaceuticals - in which tens, if
not hundreds, of tablets are often ingested - the number of oleander seeds
ingested is far fewer (median 3) and therefore the reported number ingested is
likely to be reasonably accurate. Second, it is possible that other factors
such as delays in seeking treatment or greater absorption of poison might
contribute to their poorer outcome.
This study shows that elderly people are highly susceptible to the effects
of poisoning and may die despite taking a relatively small amount of poison.
This is likely to be true for all poisons, not just yellow oleander. Suicide
prevention efforts in this age group must involve not only improved mental
health and social services, and restriction of access to lethal means, but
also access to high-quality medical treatment and antidotes to reduce the
number of elderly patients who die from self-harm.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank the provincial director, hospital directors, consultant
physicians
and medical and nursing staff of the study hospitals
for their support, the Ox
- Col study doctors for their work,
and Robin Jacoby for review. M. E. is a
Wellcome Trust Career
Development Fellow and is funded by grant 063560 from
the Tropical
Interest Group. The South Asian Clinical Toxicology Research
Collaboration is funded by the Wellcome Trust/National Health
and Medical
Research Council International Collaborative Research
Grant 071669MA.

REFERENCES
- Conwell, Y., Duberstein, P. R. & Caine, E. D.
(2002) Risk factors for suicide in later life.
Biological Psychiatry,
52, 193
-204.[CrossRef][Medline]
- de Leo, D. (2001) Attempted and completed
suicide in older subjects: results from the WHO/EURO Multicentre Study of
Suicidal Behaviour. International Journal of Geriatric
Psychiatry, 16, 1
-11.[CrossRef][Medline]
- Eddleston, M., Ariaratnam, C. A., Meyer, P. W., et al
(1999) Epidemic of self-poisoning with seeds of the yellow
oleander tree (Thevetia peruviana) in northern Sri Lanka.
Tropical Medicine and International Health,
4, 266-273.
- Eddleston, M., Gunnell, D., Karunaratne, A., et al
(2005a) Epidemiology of intentional self-poisoning
in rural Sri Lanka. British Journal of Psychiatry,
187, 583
-584.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- Eddleston, M., Juszczak, E., Buckley, N. A., et al
(2005b) Randomised controlled trial of routine
single or multiple dose superactivated charcoal for self-poisoning in a region
with high mortality (abstract). Clinical Toxicology,
43, 442
-443.
- Harwood, D. & Jacoby, R. (2000) Suicidal
behaviour among the elderly. In International Handbook of Suicide
and Attempted Suicide (eds K. Hawton & K. van Heeringen), pp. 275
-291. Chichester: Wiley.
- Krug, E. G., Dahlberg, L. L., Mercy, J. A., et al
(2002) Self-directed violence. In World Report on
Violence and Health, pp. 185-212.
Geneva: World Health Organization.
- Miller, M., Azrael, D. & Hemenway, D.
(2004) The epidemiology of case fatality rates for suicide in
the northeast. Annals of Emergency Medicine,
43, 723
-730.[CrossRef][Medline]
- Muhlberg, W., Becher, K., Heppner, H.-J., et al
(2005) Acute poisoning in old and very old patients: a
longitudinal retrospective study of 5883 patients in a toxicological intensive
care unit. Zeitschrift für Gerontologie und
Geriatrie, 38, 182
-189.[Medline]
- Spicer, R. S. & Miller, T. R. (2000)
Suicide acts in 8 states: incidence and case fatality rates by demographics
and method. American Journal of Public Health,
90, 1885
-1891.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- World Health Organization (2001)
World Health Report 2001. Mental Health: New Understanding, New
Hope. Geneva: WHO.
Received for publication October 26, 2005.
Revision received January 18, 2006.
Accepted for publication April 3, 2006.
Related articles in BJP:
- From the Editor's desk
- Peter Tyrer
BJP 2006 189: 294.
[Full Text]
This article has been cited by other articles:

|
 |

|
 |
 
L. Senarathna, M. Eddleston, M.F. Wilks, B.H. Woollen, J.A. Tomenson, D.M. Roberts, and N.A. Buckley
Prediction of outcome after paraquat poisoning by measurement of the plasma paraquat concentration
QJM,
April 1, 2009;
102(4):
251 - 259.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
Completed Suicides in the Elderly: Effects of Physical Vulnerability
Journal Watch Psychiatry,
October 6, 2006;
2006(1006):
3 - 3.
[Full Text]
|
 |
|