Avtor/Urednik     Turčin, Arijana; Turčin, Zlatan; Gregorič-Kumperščak, Hojka; Zalsman, Gil; Kores-Plesničar, Blanka
Naslov     Suicide attempts among adolescents in northeastern Slovenia over the past 25 years
Tip     članek
Vir     In: Merrick J, Zalsman G, editors. Suicidal behavior in adolescence: an international perspective. Tel Aviv: Freund publishing house,
Leto izdaje     2005
Obseg     str. 265-72
Jezik     eng
Abstrakt     Slovenia is a country with a high national suicide rate (30/100,00/year). The rate of suicide attempts is accordingly high, for both adolescents and adults. Suicidal children and adolescents from the four North-eastern regions of Slovenia are hospitalised at the Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Unit of the General Hospital Maribor. The aim of this chapter was to show the pattern of changes in these hospitalisations along 25 years. The data was collected retrospectively, using chart review of this unit by a psychiatrist for the years 1978 through 2004. The data consisted of two different samples. The first sample contained gender distribution (n=774) from 1978 to mid 2004 with 664 girls and 110 boys, and the second sample (n=1,477) consisted of suicide attempts as well as alcohol (n=772) and drug abuse (n=115) data for the last decade. The number of hospitalisations was increasing in a wavy curve with average 7,5 times more admitted girls than boys. In 98%, the suicide method was intoxication, and most were additionally diagnosed with "adolescent crisis" (ICD-10:F93.8). The rise in the number of admitted suicidal adolescents was partly consequent to the improvement of their detection maybe because 25 years ago most of these cases were recorded as "accidental poisonings" and did not include the diagnosis of a suicide attempt. The socio-economic changes characteristic of a country in transition also contributed to this increase, as did the development of the Unit with more trained staff and advanced treatment.
Deskriptorji     SUICIDE, ATTEMPTED
SELF-INJURIOUS BEHAVIOR
ALCOHOL DRINKING
SUBSTANCE ABUSE
SEX FACTORS
ADOLESCENCE