Factors influencing the decision to use hanging as a method of suicide: qualitative study

Author:

Biddle Lucy,Donovan Jenny,Owen-Smith Amanda,Potokar John,Longson Damien,Hawton Keith,Kapur Nav,Gunnell David

Abstract

BackgroundHanging is the most frequently used method of suicide in the UK and has high case fatality (>70%).AimsTo explore factors influencing the decision to use hanging.MethodSemi-structured qualitative interviews with 12 men and 10 women who had survived a near-fatal suicide attempt. Eight respondents had attempted hanging. Data were analysed thematically and with constant comparison.ResultsHanging was adopted or contemplated for two main reasons: the anticipated nature of a death from hanging; and accessibility. Those favouring hanging anticipated a certain, rapid and painless death with little awareness of dying and believed it was a ‘clean’ method that would not damage the body or leave harrowing images for others. Materials for hanging were easily accessed and respondents considered it ‘simple’ to perform without the need for planning or technical knowledge. Hanging was thus seen as the ‘quickest’ and ‘easiest’ method with few barriers to completion and sometimes adopted despite not being a first choice. Respondents who rejected hanging recognised it could be slow, painful and ‘messy’, and thought technical knowledge was needed for implementation.ConclusionsPrevention strategies should focus on countering perceptions of hanging as a clean, painless and rapid method that is easily implemented. However, care is needed in the delivery of such messages as some individuals could gain information that might facilitate fatal implementation. Detailed research needs to focus on developing and evaluating interventions that can manage this tension.

Publisher

Royal College of Psychiatrists

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health

Reference19 articles.

1. Changes in rates of suicide by car exhaust asphyxiation in England and Wales

2. How are nations trying to prevent suicide? An analysis of national suicide prevention strategies

3. Suicide survivors. A follow-up study of persons who survived jumping from the Golden Gate and San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridges;Rosen;West J Med,1975

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