Open Journal of Psychiatry & Allied Sciences

Open Access
UGC CARE (Group 1)
  • Year: 2018
  • Volume: 9
  • Issue: 1

Gender differences among suspected suicide attempts in a rural tertiary care hospital in South India

1Assistant Professor, Adichunchangiri Institute of Medical Sciences, Balagangadharanatha, Nagara-571448, Nagamangala Taluk, Mandya District, Karnataka, India

2Consulting Psychiatrist, INHS Asvini, RC Church, Colaba, Mumbai-400005, Maharashtra, India

Abstract

Globally, majority of suicide completers are known to be men as opposed to the majority of suicide attempters being women. Men use lethal methods more often than women who rely more on poisoning.

To study the gender differences in the characteristics of the suspected cases of suicidal attempts among the medicolegal cases admitted to a rural tertiary care hospital.

Retrospective, explorative-descriptive study of medicolegal case records of patients admitted to a rural tertiary care hospital situated in the southern state of Karnataka, India.

Medicolegal case records of suspected cases of suicide attempt (n=829) admitted between the period of January 2013 to December 2015 were analysed.

Descriptive analysis for frequencies and percentages was done. The Pearson's chi-square test was used to study the gender difference amongst the different variables.

Majority of the suspected suicide attempters were male (59.8%), in the age group of 21–30 years (44.8%), married (62.2%), farmers (51.4%), and belonging to lower socioeconomic status (62.7%). For both the genders, the most common mode of attempting suicide was by pesticide poisoning (overall 49.2%) and the most common immediate precipitants were relationship issues (overall 49.5%). Females were significantly younger than males. There was statistically significant association of gender with age group, occupation, mode of attempt, and immediate precipitant.

Gender differences among suicide attempters might be reflective of the socio-cultural and regional influences on suicidal behaviour in a rural agrarian setting.

Keywords

Pesticides, Poisoning, Rural Hospitals, Medicolegal Aspects