Charcoal Burning and Maternal Filicide-Suicide Trends in Taiwan: The Impact of Accessibility of Lethal Methods

Charcoal burning has emerged as a novel suicide method in Taiwan and its impact on maternal filicide-suicide (MFS) remains unexplored. Using official national mortality data and reports of MFS cases from electronic newspaper archives, the authors aimed to examine whether the newly available charcoal...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Yi-Ju Pan, Ming-Been Lee
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2008-10-01
Series:Journal of the Formosan Medical Association
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0929664608601953
id doaj-6e85844a9fb54f98ac3d4fba6758247e
record_format Article
spelling doaj-6e85844a9fb54f98ac3d4fba6758247e2020-11-25T00:21:36ZengElsevierJournal of the Formosan Medical Association0929-66462008-10-011071081181510.1016/S0929-6646(08)60195-3Charcoal Burning and Maternal Filicide-Suicide Trends in Taiwan: The Impact of Accessibility of Lethal MethodsYi-Ju Pan0Ming-Been Lee1Taiwan Suicide Prevention Center, Department of Health, TaiwanTaiwan Suicide Prevention Center, Department of Health, TaiwanCharcoal burning has emerged as a novel suicide method in Taiwan and its impact on maternal filicide-suicide (MFS) remains unexplored. Using official national mortality data and reports of MFS cases from electronic newspaper archives, the authors aimed to examine whether the newly available charcoal burning was associated with an increase in MFS incidents during the period from 1999 to 2006. The trends for changes in age/gender/method-specific suicide rates and MFS incidence were analyzed and then correlated with each other. The results indicated that charcoal burning was the leading method of filicide in reported MFS incidents. The increase in MFS incidents paralleled that of charcoal burning-specific suicide rates in females aged 25–44 years, while suicide rates by other methods did not change significantly. Easy accessibility and perceived painlessness as conveyed by the media might account for the choices of charcoal burning for MFS. Restricting access to charcoal burning should therefore be prioritized for further prevention strategies.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0929664608601953charcoalmaternal behaviormurderpreventive measuressuicide
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yi-Ju Pan
Ming-Been Lee
spellingShingle Yi-Ju Pan
Ming-Been Lee
Charcoal Burning and Maternal Filicide-Suicide Trends in Taiwan: The Impact of Accessibility of Lethal Methods
Journal of the Formosan Medical Association
charcoal
maternal behavior
murder
preventive measures
suicide
author_facet Yi-Ju Pan
Ming-Been Lee
author_sort Yi-Ju Pan
title Charcoal Burning and Maternal Filicide-Suicide Trends in Taiwan: The Impact of Accessibility of Lethal Methods
title_short Charcoal Burning and Maternal Filicide-Suicide Trends in Taiwan: The Impact of Accessibility of Lethal Methods
title_full Charcoal Burning and Maternal Filicide-Suicide Trends in Taiwan: The Impact of Accessibility of Lethal Methods
title_fullStr Charcoal Burning and Maternal Filicide-Suicide Trends in Taiwan: The Impact of Accessibility of Lethal Methods
title_full_unstemmed Charcoal Burning and Maternal Filicide-Suicide Trends in Taiwan: The Impact of Accessibility of Lethal Methods
title_sort charcoal burning and maternal filicide-suicide trends in taiwan: the impact of accessibility of lethal methods
publisher Elsevier
series Journal of the Formosan Medical Association
issn 0929-6646
publishDate 2008-10-01
description Charcoal burning has emerged as a novel suicide method in Taiwan and its impact on maternal filicide-suicide (MFS) remains unexplored. Using official national mortality data and reports of MFS cases from electronic newspaper archives, the authors aimed to examine whether the newly available charcoal burning was associated with an increase in MFS incidents during the period from 1999 to 2006. The trends for changes in age/gender/method-specific suicide rates and MFS incidence were analyzed and then correlated with each other. The results indicated that charcoal burning was the leading method of filicide in reported MFS incidents. The increase in MFS incidents paralleled that of charcoal burning-specific suicide rates in females aged 25–44 years, while suicide rates by other methods did not change significantly. Easy accessibility and perceived painlessness as conveyed by the media might account for the choices of charcoal burning for MFS. Restricting access to charcoal burning should therefore be prioritized for further prevention strategies.
topic charcoal
maternal behavior
murder
preventive measures
suicide
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0929664608601953
work_keys_str_mv AT yijupan charcoalburningandmaternalfilicidesuicidetrendsintaiwantheimpactofaccessibilityoflethalmethods
AT mingbeenlee charcoalburningandmaternalfilicidesuicidetrendsintaiwantheimpactofaccessibilityoflethalmethods
_version_ 1725361940230832128