Abstract
BackgroundSuicide is a relatively rare incident. Nevertheless, parts of the literature on intentional self-harm behaviour state that suicide is one of the leading causes of death. We aimed to assess the evidence behind the statement that suicide is a leading cause of death across all ages, with reference to the methods of ranking causes of death.MethodsTwo sets of data were used: For the European Union (EU) we used cause specific mortality statistics from the European Statistical Office (Eurostat) for the data-year 2014, and globally and for the WHO European Region we used data from Global Health Estimates (GHE) 2015. We used different sets of rules to select mutually exclusive leading underlying causes of mortality for Europe (EU28). We also present lists with estimates of leading causes of death globally, and for the WHO European Region based on the GHE 2015.ResultsIn 2014, 1.2% of all reported deaths in the Europe Union (EU28) were due to suicide, and 1.4% globally (2015) according to the WHO estimates. In Europe, suicide was ranked as number 11 and 15 in the two different ranking lists we used, and according to GHE-2015, suicide was ranked as the 17th leading cause globally, and number 14 in the WHO European Region. Looking at the differences by sex, suicide for males was ranked as the ninth and the tenth leading cause of death in two ranking lists for the European Union. For females, suicide was number 13 in the first and 23 in the second list, respectively.ConclusionsDifferent cause lists and rules for ranking produce different leading causes of mortality. The quality of data can also affect the ranking. Our rankings suggested that suicide was not among the ten leading causes of death in Europe or globally. To ensure that ranking causes of death is not driven by political motives and funding considerations, standard methods and official tabulation lists should be used. The rankings do not necessarily present the causes of mortality of greatest public health importance.
Highlights
In Europe, suicide was ranked as number 11 and 15 in the two different ranking lists we used, and according to Global Health Estimates (GHE)-2015, suicide was ranked as the 17th leading cause globally, and number 14 in the World Health Organization (WHO) European Region
Our rankings suggested that suicide was not among the ten leading causes of death in Europe or globally
To ensure that ranking causes of death is not driven by political motives and funding considerations, standard methods and official tabulation lists should be used
Summary
We aimed to assess the evidence behind the statement that suicide is a leading cause of death across all ages, with reference to the methods of ranking causes of death. The purpose of this article was to assess the evidence behind the statement that suicide is a leading cause of death, with reference to the methods of ranking causes of death used to position a rare incident like suicide as one of the leading causes of death
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