Healthcare (Jan 2024)

Identifying Witnessed Suicides in National Violent Death Reporting System Narratives

  • Vickie M. Mays,
  • Mikaela Gareeb,
  • Xingruo Zhang,
  • Vivian Nguyen,
  • Joelle Rosenberg,
  • Yuri Lin,
  • Alina Arseniev-Koehler,
  • Adam Eliav,
  • Jacob Gates Foster,
  • Mika Baumgardner,
  • Susan D. Cochran

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare12020209
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 2
p. 209

Abstract

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There is increasing attention to suicides that occur in view of others, as these deaths can cause significant psychological impact on witnesses. This study illuminates characteristics of witnessed suicides and compares characteristics of these deaths to non-witnessed suicides. We develop a codable definition of what constitutes witnessed (vs. non-witnessed) suicide. Our data include a sample of 1200 suicide descriptions from the 2003–2017 National Violent Death Reporting System (NVDRS). We first developed criteria to identify probable cases of witnessed suicide. The coding scheme achieved 94.5% agreement and identified approximately 10% (n = 125) of suicides as witnessed. Next, we examined differences between witnessed and non-witnessed suicides in demographics, manner of death, and social/environmental factors using bivariate Chi-squared tests, multivariate logistic regression, and ANOVA. Witnessed suicide decedents were significantly more likely than non-witnessed suicide decedents to be male, younger, and members of a sexual minority, and to have died in living spaces by means of a firearm. Two thirds of witnesses were strangers to the decedents, while 23.2% were romantic partners or ex-partners of the decedents. Our coding method offers a reliable approach to identify witnessed suicides. While witnessed suicides are relatively infrequent, these deaths have profound impact on witnesses. Articulating the features of witnessed suicides may contribute to identifying potential risk mitigation strategies.

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