For the study, researchers examined U.S. Poison Center data from
2000-2018 on 1.68 million suspected cases of suicide by
self-poisoning among people ages 10 to 25. Overall, one in four
cases resulted in serious or potentially life-threatening medical
issues.
Rates of serious medical issues after self-poisoning rose with age,
from 20% of attempted suicides among 10 to 12-year-olds to 28% among
22- to 25-year-olds.
More than 90% of cases involved pharmaceuticals, the study found.
Two of the substances most often used among all age groups were
over-the-counter painkillers and antidepressants which, combined,
made up more than one-third of the suicide attempts involving
poison.
"It is likely because these are so widely available, in almost every
home," said Dr. Henry Spiller, lead author of the study and director
of the Central Ohio Poison Center at Nationwide Children's Hospital
in Columbus.
"Additionally, they can be purchased easily and cheaply," Spiller
said by email. "In therapeutic doses these medications are quite
safe but in very large doses, acetaminophen causes liver failure and
aspirin causes metabolic acidosis, seizures and coma."
Analgesics were among the substances used in poisoning attempts that
most often resulted in serious health issues, along with
antidepressants, antihistamines, and antipsychotics.
Prescription medicines for attention deficit hyperactivity disorder
(ADHD) were common in suicide attempts by younger children and teens
and had the highest risk of serious medical outcomes.
Opioids only accounted for about 7% of cases with serious medical
outcomes.
Sedatives and hypnotics were used more often among older age groups,
researchers report in the Journal of Clinical Toxicology.
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Suicide attempts dropped in the summer for youth 18 and under, but
not for young adults ages 19 to 21. And cases spiked during the
summer among 22- to 25-year-olds.
The study didn't examine what factors might lead to suicide attempts
by poisoning.
Even so, the findings should remind parents that even older children
need to be kept away from medications, said Dr. Lois Lee, a
pediatric emergency medicine physician at Boston Children's Hospital
who wasn't involved in the study.
"It is not realistic for all home medications to be locked away,"
Lee said by email. "However, parents should strongly consider
locking away acetaminophen, ADHD medications, antihistamines and
psychiatric medications, where even a relatively small overdose
could lead to serious medical consequences. Parents can use
medication lockboxes using a key that only the parent could access
to secure these medications from teens and young adults."
While most attempts by poisoning don't result in death, they can
still cause significant harm, Lee said.
"Suicide is often an impulsive act," she noted. "With suicide
attempted by poisoning, most drug effects take time to develop
symptoms, which provides time for the individual to either tell
someone (e.g. friend, parent) about their poisoning and/or makes the
poisoning apparent with the development of symptoms. Then the
individual can have the appropriate medical care and psychiatric
care administered."
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2IwBAex Journal of Clinical Toxicology, online
October 6, 2019.
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