Suicides
Suicide,
the intentional taking of one's own life, is a serious public health
problem in North Carolina. Figure 12 shows that a firearm was the
means employed in 72 percent of suicides.
Suicides
by sex and by means are shown in Figures 13 and 14. Males were more
likely to use firearms compared to females (74.4 percent vs. 60.8
percent) while females were more likely to use drugs or poisons
compared to males (19.9 percent vs. 7.3 percent).
Figure
12

Figure
13

Figure
14

Suicide
rates by race-sex group are shown in Table 8 while suicide rates
by age group are shown in Figure 15. The suicide rates for whites
were higher than for nonwhites, with white males having the highest
rate. The suicide rate for nonwhite males was over eight times higher
than that for nonwhite females, while the suicide rate for males
in general was five times the rate for females. Persons between
25 and 34 years of age had the highest suicide rate.
Table
8: 1995 Medical Examiner Suicide Death Rates by Race
and Sex (per 100,000 population)
| |
White |
Nonwhite |
Total |
| Male |
23.7 |
16.5 |
22.0 |
| Female |
5.3 |
1.9 |
4.4 |
| Total |
14.3 |
8.7 |
12.9 |
|
Figure
15

Figure
16 shows that the majority of suicides occurred during the daytime
hours (7 a.m.-6 p.m.), although a peak occurred between 8 p.m. and
midnight. Suicides by day of injury showed no apparent pattern.
Contrary to popular wisdom, holiday periods are not the most likely
time for suicides and typically spring is the peak period. Cases
in 1994 fit this pattern, with an unexplained high number in May
(Figure 17). It should be noted that a third of the suicide victims
had an unknown hour of injury.
Figure
16

Figure
17

|