Social Factors and Mortality from NASH in Canada
The NASH categories (Natural, Accident, Suicide, Homicide) used on death certificates are known to obscure many of the psychological dimensions of death. Although there are many studies of death certificates of the extent to which suicide may be misclassified as accidental or natural deaths, and a f...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Crisis : the journal of crisis intervention and suicide prevention 1998, Vol.19 (2), p.73-77 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The NASH categories (Natural, Accident, Suicide, Homicide) used on death
certificates are known to obscure many of the psychological dimensions of death.
Although there are many studies of death certificates of the extent to which
suicide may be misclassified as accidental or natural deaths, and a few studies
comparing individuals who commit suicides to accidental death victims, this
topic is often neglected at a sociological level. This analysis of the NASH
modes of death examines if these deaths differ from a sociological perspective.
Specifically, rates of divorce, marriage, birth, and unemployment were
correlated with deaths of natural causes (stomach cancer, cirrhosis of the
liver), accidents (motor vehicle accident), suicide, and homicide. The results
suggest that the sociological associations with some causes of death (i. e.,
cirrhosis of the liver, suicide and, homicide) have a similar social pattern but
are different from others (i. e., motor vehicle accidents and stomach cancer).
Although there are problems of interpretation at a sociological level, it is
suggested that the social epidemiology of death may be obscured by the NASH
classification. Recent suggestions on terminology and taxonomy by the
International Academy for Suicide Research (IASR) are offered as one step
towards addressing this issue. |
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ISSN: | 0227-5910 2151-2396 |
DOI: | 10.1027/0227-5910.19.2.73 |