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Suicide by hanging

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Early 20th century engraving of a woman discovering a suicide by hanging

Suicide by hanging is the intentional killing of oneself (suicide) via suspension from an anchor-point such as an overhead beam or hook, by a rope or cord or by jumping from a height with a noose around the neck.

Hanging is often considered to be a simple suicide method that does not require complicated techniques; a study of people who attempted suicide by hanging and lived usually suggests that this perception may not be accurate.[1] It is one of the most commonly used suicide methods and has a high mortality rate; Gunnell et al. gives a figure of at least 70 percent.[2] The materials required are easily available, making it a difficult method to prevent.[2] In the International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems, suicides by hanging are classified under the code X70: "Intentional self-harm by hanging, strangulation, and suffocation."[3][4]

Hanging is divided into suspension hanging and the much rarer drop hanging⁠ ⁠— the latter can kill in various ways. People who survive either because the cord or its anchor point of attachment breaks, or because they are discovered and cut down, can face a range of serious injuries, including cerebral anoxia (which can lead to permanent brain damage), laryngeal fracture, cervical spine fracture, tracheal fracture, pharyngeal laceration, and carotid artery injury. Ron M. Brown writes that hanging has a "fairly imperspicuous and complicated symbolic history".[5] There are commentaries on hanging in antiquity, and it has various cultural interpretations. Throughout history, numerous famous people have died due to suicide by hanging.

Medical effects and treatment

People who survive hanging report seeing flashing lights and hearing ringing sounds.[6] The neck of people who are hanged are usually marked with furrows where the ligature had constricted the neck. An inverted V mark is also often seen.[7] Because of the pressure on the jaw, the tongue is sometimes protruding, causing it to dry.[8] Depending on the circumstances, petechiae may be present on the eyes, face, legs, and feet.[8][9] Cervical spine fractures are rare unless the hanging is a drop hanging,[10] which usually causes an injury known as hangman's fracture.[11] Suspension hanging usually results in cerebral hypoxia and decreased muscle tone around the neck.[12] According to Aufderheide et al., the most common cause of death of hangings is cerebral hypoxia.[13]

Most people who are hanged die before they are found; the term "near hanging" refers to those who survive (at least for a while—for example, until they reach hospital).[14][15] Initial treatment of survivors follows the "usual priorities of airway, breathing, and circulation (ABC)". Treatment should be "directed at airway control with endotracheal intubation, ventilation using positive end expiratory pressure (PEEP), and hyperventilation with supplemental oxygen to control intracranial pressure".[16] One study of people who experienced near-hanging who were treated appropriately at hospital found that 77 percent of them survived.[14]

Prevalence

Ixtab (Rope Woman), the ancient Maya goddess of suicide by hanging. Under certain circumstances, suicide was considered an honorable way to die and Ixtab would act as a psychopomp for these individuals.

According to Anton J. L. van Hooff, hanging was the most common suicide method in primitive and pre-industrial societies.[17] A 2008 review of 56 countries based on World Health Organization mortality data found that hanging was the most common method in most of the countries,[18] accounting for 53 percent of the male suicides and 39 percent of the female suicides.[19]

In England and Wales, hanging is the most commonly used method, and is particularly prevalent in the group of males aged 15–44, comprising almost half of the suicides in the group. It is the second most common method among women, behind poisoning. In 1981 hanging accounted for 23.5 percent of male suicides, and by 2001 the figure had risen to 44.2 percent.[3] The proportion of hangings as suicides in 2005 among women aged 15–34 was 47.2 percent, having risen from 5.7 percent in 1968.[20] In the United States it is the second most common method, behind firearms,[21] and is by far the most common method for those in psychiatric wards and hospitals.[22] Hanging accounts for a greater percentage of suicides among younger Americans than among older ones.[23] Differences exist among ethnic groups; research suggests that hanging is the most common method among Chinese and Japanese Americans.[24] Hanging is also a frequently used method for those in custody, in several countries.[2]

Process

In general, there are two methods of hanging: suspension hanging (the suspension of the body at the neck) and drop hanging (a calculated drop designed to break the neck). Manual strangulation and suffocation may also be considered all together with hanging.[25]

To perform a suspension hanging, a rope or other ligature is tied into a noose which goes around the neck, a knot (often a running knot, which tightens easily) is formed, and the other end of the rope is tied to a ligature point; the body is then suspended, which tightens the ligature around the neck.[citation needed]

Regardless of the material used to form the noose, suspension hanging will kill the person in three ways: compression of the carotid arteries, the jugular veins, or the airway.[8][26] About 11 lb (5 kg) of pressure is required to compress the carotid artery; 4.4 lb (2 kg) for the jugular veins;[8] and at least 15 kg (33 lb) for the airway.[14] The amount of time it takes to lose consciousness and die is difficult to predict accurately and depends on several factors. Some believe unconsciousness occurs in five seconds, though Alan Gunn writes that it generally takes longer. It took a man who filmed his hanging 13 seconds to become unconscious, 1 minute and 38 seconds to lose muscle tone, and 4 minutes and 10 seconds for muscle movement to cease.[27][28] Full suspension is not required; most hanging suicides are done by partial suspension, according to Wyatt et al.[29] Geo Stone, author of Suicide and Attempted Suicide: Methods and Consequences, suggests that death by obstruction of the airway is more painful than by the other ways.[25]

The aim of drop hanging, which is also frequently used in executions, is to break the neck. Participants fall vertically with a rope attached to their neck, which when taut applies a force sufficient to break the spinal cord, causing death.[25][30] The length of the drop, usually between 1.56 and 2.75 metres long, is calculated such that it is short enough to allow a less painful death, but long enough to avoid leaving the person handicapped and alive.[31] This form of suicide is much rarer than suspension hanging[14] and is likely to be less painful.[32]

Related elements

The majority of deaths by hanging in the UK and US are suicides, although there are some cases involving erotic asphyxiation.[16] Homicides may be disguised as a hanging suicide.[33] Features that suggest that the death is a homicide include the ligature marks being under the larynx, scratch marks on the ligature, and the presence of significant injury on the skin of the neck.[8]

Cultural aspects

Painting by Giotto depicting a person committing the sin of desperatio, the rejection of God's mercy, because while choked they are unable to ask for repentance.[34]

Historically, countries that have had a recent history of using hanging as a method of capital punishment tend to have a low rate of hanging suicides, which may be because such suicides were regarded as shameful, according to Farmer and Rodhe.[35][36] Hanging, with its connection to justice and injustice, is what the Department of Health and Aged Care of Australia calls a "particularly confronting display of resistance, defiance, individual control and accusatory blame"; it is "a rebuke and statement of uncaring relations, unmet needs, personal anguish, and emotional payback".[37] A 2010 study by the British Journal of Psychiatry that investigated the motivations of people who had made a near-fatal suicide attempt found that those who had attempted a hanging considered it a painless, quick, simple, and clean method, while those who had opted for a different method held an opposing view.[38]

There is a popular belief in Chinese culture that the spirits of those who have died by suicide by hanging will haunt and torment the survivors, because they had died in rage and with feelings of hostility and anger.[39] Angry and oppressed women would use this method as an act of revenge.[40] Lee & Kleinman write that hanging, the most common method in traditional China, was the "final, but unequivocal, way of standing still against and above oppressive authorities, often with the suicidée ceremonially dressed prior to the ultimate act".[41]

In ancient Rome, death by hanging—suicide or otherwise—was regarded as particularly shameful, and those who had died by this method were refused a burial.[42] Virgil's Aeneid, for example, refers to the noose as nodum informis leti ("the coil of unbecoming death").[43] Timothy Hill writes that there is no conclusive explanation of why the stigma existed; it has been suggested that hanging was a method of the poor.[44] The Greeks considered hanging as a woman's death because many women had died by this method.[45] A study found that, in literary sources, 1.5–10 percent and 30 percent of suicides in the Roman and Greek civilizations, respectively, were by hanging.[46]

Suicide by hanging is particularly common among Indigenous Australians, who have a high suicide rate, especially among young men.[47][48] Ernest Hunter and Desley Harvey suggest that hanging accounts for two-thirds of indigenous suicides.[47] Hanging has deep symbolic meanings in Indigenous Australian culture, beyond those attached to the act generally.[30][49] Hanging appears in indigenous art, film, music, and literature.[50] There are reports of voices encouraging people to kill themselves, and of ghostly figures holding a noose, but saying nothing.[51]

See also

References

Citations

  1. ^ "Factors influencing the decision to use hanging as a method of suicide: qualitative study". The British Journal of Psychiatry. September 2010. Archived from the original on 31 August 2015.
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b c Gunnell, D.; Bennewith, O; Hawton, K; Simkin, S; Kapur, N (2005). "The epidemiology and prevention of suicide by hanging: A systematic review". International Journal of Epidemiology. 34 (2): 433–42. doi:10.1093/ije/dyh398. PMID 15659471.
  3. ^ X70 Intentional self-harm by hanging, strangulation and suffocation Archived 2 November 2014 at the Wayback Machine ICD-10: 2007 version.
  4. ^ The Art of Suicide. Reaktion Books. p. 226.
  5. ^ Elsevier Comprehensive Guide. Elsevier India. 2009. p. 616. ISBN 978-81-312-1620-0.
  6. ^ Dolinak, David; Matshes, Evan; Lew, Emma O. (2005). Forensic Pathology: Principles and Practice. Elsevier. p. 211. ISBN 978-0-08-047066-5.
  7. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e Riviello, Ralph (ed) (2010). Manual of Forensic Emergency Medicine: A Guide for Clinicians. Jones & Bartlett Learning. pp. 15–7.
  8. ^ Forensic Pathology, p. 213.
  9. ^ Gunn, p. 181.
  10. ^ Matsuyama, Takeshi; Okuchi, Kazuo; Seki, Tadahiko; Murao, Yoshinori (2004). "Prognostic factors in hanging injuries". The American Journal of Emergency Medicine. 22 (3): 207–10. doi:10.1016/j.ajem.2004.02.012. PMID 15138959.
  11. ^ Hanna, S.J (2004). "A study of 13 cases of near-hanging presenting to an Accident and Emergency Department". Injury. 35 (3): 253–6. doi:10.1016/S0020-1383(03)00110-4. PMID 15124792.
  12. ^ Aufderheide, Tom P.; Aprahamian, Charles; Mateer, James R.; Rudnick, Eric; Manchester, Elizabeth M.; Lawrence, Sarah W.; Olson, David W.; Hargarten, Stephen W. (1994). "Emergency airway management in hanging victims". Annals of Emergency Medicine. 24 (5): 879–84. doi:10.1016/S0196-0644(94)70206-3. PMID 7978561.
  13. ^ Jump up to: a b c d Adams, Nick (1999). "Near hanging". Emergency Medicine Australasia. 11: 17–21. doi:10.1046/j.1442-2026.1999.00314.x.
  14. ^ Wyatt, et al., p. 226.
  15. ^ Jump up to: a b Howell, M A; Guly, H R (1996). "Near hanging presenting to an accident and emergency department". Emergency Medicine Journal. 13 (2): 135–136. doi:10.1136/emj.13.2.135. PMC 1342658. PMID 8653240.
  16. ^ Comprehensive Textbook of Suicidology, pp. 97–8.
  17. ^ Ajdacic-Gross, Vladeta; Weiss, MG; Ring, M; Hepp, U; Bopp, M; Gutzwiller, F; Rössler, W (2008). "Methods of suicide: international suicide patterns derived from the WHO mortality database". Bulletin of the World Health Organization. 86 (9): 726–32. doi:10.2471/BLT.07.043489. PMC 2649482. PMID 18797649. Archived from the original on 23 September 2011.
  18. ^ O'Connor, Rory C.; Platt, Stephen; Gordon, Jacki. (eds) (2011). International Handbook of Suicide Prevention: Research, Policy and Practice. John Wiley & Sons. p. 34.
  19. ^ Biddle, L.; Brock, A.; Brookes, S. T; Gunnell, D. (2008). "Suicide rates in young men in England and Wales in the 21st century: Time trend study". BMJ. 336 (7643): 539–42. doi:10.1136/bmj.39475.603935.25. PMC 2265363. PMID 18276666..
  20. ^ "Suicide in the U.S.: Statistics and Prevention" Archived 24 October 2010 at the Wayback Machine. National Institute of Mental Health. Retrieved 2 August 2011.
  21. ^ (2001). Front Line of Defense: The Role of Nurses in Preventing Sentinel Events. . p. 91.
  22. ^ Comprehensive Textbook of Suicidology, pp. 290–1.
  23. ^ Maris, Ronald W.; Berman; Alan L.; Maltsberger, John T.; et al. (eds) (1992). Assessment and Prediction of Suicide. Guilford Press. p. 385.
  24. ^ Jump up to: a b c Stone.
  25. ^ Comprehensive Textbook of Suicidology, pp. 302–3.
  26. ^ Sauvageau, Anny; Racette, Stéphanie (2007). "Agonal Sequences in a Filmed Suicidal Hanging: Analysis of Respiratory and Movement Responses to Asphyxia by Hanging". Journal of Forensic Sciences. 52 (4): 957–9. doi:10.1111/j.1556-4029.2007.00459.x. PMID 17524058.
  27. ^ Gunn, p. 187.
  28. ^ Wyatt, et al., p. 106.
  29. ^ Jump up to: a b Tatz, Colin (2001). Aboriginal Suicide is Different: A Portrait of Life and Self-Destruction. Aboriginal Studies Press. pp. 65–6.
  30. ^ Wyatt, et al., p. 107.
    • For the length, see Miletich and Lindstrom.
  31. ^ Miletich and Lindstrom.
  32. ^ Wyatt, et al., p. 107.
  33. ^ Comprehensive Textbook of Suicidology, pp. 108–9.
  34. ^ Farmer, R.; Rohde, J. (1980). "Effect of availability and acceptability of lethal instruments on suicide mortality AN ANALYSIS OF SOME INTERNATIONAL DATA". Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica. 62 (5): 436–46. doi:10.1111/j.1600-0447.1980.tb00632.x. PMID 7211428.
  35. ^ Comprehensive Textbook of Suicidology, p. 292.
  36. ^ Hunter, et al., p. 22. For the second quote, see p. 24.
  37. ^ Biddle, L.; Donovan, J.; Owen-Smith, A.; Potokar, J.; Longson, D.; Hawton, K.; Kapur, N.; Gunnell, D. (2010). "Factors influencing the decision to use hanging as a method of suicide: Qualitative study". The British Journal of Psychiatry. 197 (4): 320–5. doi:10.1192/bjp.bp.109.076349. PMID 20884956.
  38. ^ H. X. Lee, Jonathan; Nadeau, Kathleen. (2011). Encyclopedia of Asian American Folklore and Folklife. ABC-CLIO. p. 11.
  39. ^ Bourne, PG (1973). "Suicide among Chinese in San Francisco". American Journal of Public Health. 63 (8): 744–50. doi:10.2105/AJPH.63.8.744. PMC 1775294. PMID 4719540.
  40. ^ Lee & al. (2003), p. 297.
  41. ^ Hill, p. 190.
  42. ^ Edwards, Catharine (2007). Death in Ancient Rome. Yale University Press. p. 107.
  43. ^ Hill, p. 289.
  44. ^ Loraux, Nicole (1991). Tragic Ways of Killing a Woman. Harvard University Press. pp. 9–10. Translated by Anthony Forster.
  45. ^ Murray, p. 499.
  46. ^ Jump up to: a b Hunter, Ernest; Harvey, Desley (2002). "Indigenous suicide in Australia, New Zealand, Canada and the United States". Emergency Medicine Australasia. 14 (1): 14–23. doi:10.1046/j.1442-2026.2002.00281.x. PMID 11993831.
  47. ^ Graham, Anne; Reser, Joseph; Scuderi, Carl; Zubrick, Stephen; Smith, Meg; Turley, Bruce (2000). "Suicide: An Australian Psychological Society Discussion Paper". Australian Psychologist. 35: 1–28. doi:10.1080/00050060008257463.
  48. ^ Hunter, et al., pp. 21, 24.
  49. ^ Hunter, et al., p. 25.
  50. ^ Hunter, et al., pp. 25, 29–30.

Sources

Further reading

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