Mortality in children and adolescents who present to hospital following non-fatal self-harm: an observational cohort study based on the Multicentre Study of Self-harm in England
Citation
Keith Hawton, Liz Bale, Fiona Brand, PG Cert, Ellen Townsend, Jennifer Ness, Keith Waters, Caroline Clements, Nav Kapur, Galit Geulayov. Mortality in children and adolescents who present to hospital following non-fatal self-harm: an observational cohort study based on the Multicentre Study of Self-harm in England.
Abstract
Background
Self-harm and suicide in children and adolescents are both growing problems, with
self-harm associated with a significant risk of subsequent death, particularly suicide.
Long-term follow-up studies are necessary to examine the extent and nature of this
association.
Method
We used data from the Multicentre Study of Self-harm in England to investigate
deaths following self-harm to the end of 2015 in 9173 10-18 year-olds who had
13,175 self-harm presentations to the emergency departments of the study hospitals
between 2000 and 2013. Deaths were identified through the Office for National
Statistics via linkage with data from NHS Digital. Risk factors were examined using
survival models.
Findings
By the end of the follow-up period 124 (1%) of the cohort (N=9173) had died. Fiftyfive
(44%) of the deaths were suicides, 27 (22%) accidental and 42 (34%) due to
other causes. Most suicide deaths involved self-injury (n=45, 82%). There was often
a method switch from self-harm to suicide, especially from self-poisoning to hanging
or asphyxiation. The incidence of suicide in the 12 months after self-harm was over
30 times the rate expected in the general population of 10-18 year-olds in England
(SMR 31·0, 95% CI 18·2-30·9). The majority of the suicides (n=42, 77%) occurred
after age 18 years and the incidence rate remained similar over more than 10 years
follow-up. Increased suicide risk was associated with male gender, being an older
teenager, use of self-injury (especially hanging/asphyxiation) for self-harm and repeating self-harm. Accidental poisoning deaths involving substance misuse were
especially frequent in males.
Interpretation
Children and adolescents who self-harm have a considerable risk of future suicide,
especially males, older teenagers, and those who repeat self-harm. Risk may persist
over several years. Switching of method from self-poisoning in self-harm to selfinjury,
especially hanging or asphyxiation, for suicide is common. Self-harm is also
associated with risk of death from accidental poisoning, particularly involving drugs
of abuse, especially in males.
Published online at:
Collections
- Self Harm and Suicide [58]
- Nursing Research [84]