Home > Irish probable suicide deaths study - IPSDS 2015–2018.

Cox, Gemma and Munnelly, Anita and Rochford, Sarah and Kavalidou, Katerina (2022) Irish probable suicide deaths study - IPSDS 2015–2018. Dublin: HSE National Office for Suicide Prevention.

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External website: https://www.hse.ie/eng/services/list/4/mental-heal...


The IPSDS presents information of 2,349 deaths by probable suicide for a four year period from 2015 to 2018. It has used anonymised information, so that no individual person can be, or has been, identified by the authors.

This study presents information on probable suicide deaths, by looking at information contained in completed coronial files (from Coroners) through a wide lens. In Ireland, the current legal test for a coroner’s verdict of suicide includes a requirement that the self-killing and intention are proved ‘beyond a reasonable doubt’. This study includes these deaths. However, the study also includes additional deaths that are ‘more likely than not’ to have been death by suicide, that is, on the ‘balance of probabilities’. In applying this broad criteria for inclusion, this study has therefore captured, analysed and presented more deaths than are typically included in official suicide statistics in Ireland, as published by the Central Statistics Office. It also provides much more in-depth information on the characteristics of people who have died. The study has involved a secondary analysis of existing data. This means that the existing data in coronial files was not originally collected or recorded with this study in mind. Therefore, additional information that may have been of interest in this study, may not have been routinely available or recorded in those files.

Of these people who died by probable suicide:

  • 76% were men, 24% were women
  • The highest numbers were between the ages of 35 and 54
  • 50% were known to be single at their time of death
  • 38% were known to be parents
  • 66% had a history of a mental health condition
  • 51% were known to have been in contact with medical services before their death
  • 79% had past adverse life events or stressors
  • 33% had a lifetime substance use history
  • 23% had a history of previous self-harm
  • 33% were in paid employment and 26% were unemployed
  • 30% of their deaths occurred in a public location.

The full study outlines a wide range of information on these deaths by probable suicide, including sociodemographic information, clinical risk factors, adverse life events, and methods and places of death.

Item Type
Report
Publication Type
Irish-related, Report
Drug Type
All substances
Intervention Type
Harm reduction
Date
November 2022
Pages
60 p.
Publisher
HSE National Office for Suicide Prevention
Place of Publication
Dublin
EndNote

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