Dictionary Definition
suicide
Noun
1 the act of killing yourself; "it is a crime to
commit suicide" [syn: self-destruction,
self-annihilation]
2 a person who kills himself intentionally [syn:
felo-de-se]
User Contributed Dictionary
Noun
- The intentional
killing of a person
by his
or her own hand.
- In some cultures suicide is regarded as an honorable act under certain circumstances.
- A person who has intentionally killed him/herself.
- Some accounts say that Marilyn Monroe was a suicide; others disagree.
- An action that creates serious difficulty for its performer.
- Admitting that you don't own a boat would be suicide.
Related terms
Translations
the event
- Arabic:
- Bosnian: samoubistvo
- Chinese:
- Czech: sebevražda
- Danish: selvmord
- Dutch: zelfmoord , zelfdoding
- Esperanto: sinmortigo
- Finnish: itsemurha
- French: suicide
- German: Freitod, Suizid, Selbstmord
- Greek: αυτοκτονία
- Hebrew:
- Icelandic: sjálfsmorð
- Italian: suicidio
- Japanese: 自殺 (jisatsu)
- Korean: 자살 (jasal)
- Latin: suicidium
- Norwegian: selvmord, selvdrap
- Novial: selftuo
- Polish: samobójstwo
- Portuguese: suicídio
- Russian: самоубийство, суицид
- Serbian:
- Cyrillic:
самоубиство
- Roman: samoubistvo
- Cyrillic:
самоубиство
- Slovak: samomor
- Slovene: samomor
- Spanish: suicidio
- Swedish: självmord
the person
- Bosnian: samoubica
- Chinese: 自殺者 (zishazhe)
- Czech: sebevrah
- Danish: selvmorder
- Dutch: zelfmoordenaar
- French: suicidé, suicidée
- German: Suizident , Selbstmörder , Selbstmörderin
- Hebrew: ,
- Icelandic: sjálfsmorðingi
- Italian: suicida
- Japanese: 自殺者 (jisatsusha)
- Norwegian: selvmord, selvmordsoffer
- Novial: selftuere
- Old English: agenslaga
- Polish: samobójca , samobójczyni
- Portuguese: suicida
- Serbian:
- Slovene: samomorilec , samomorilka
figurative: action
- Finnish: itsemurha
See also
French
Noun
fr-noun m- Suicide (all forms)
Verb
- form of suicider
Italian
Adjective
suicide pNoun
suicide- Plural of suicida
Extensive Definition
Suicide (Latin suicidium, from
sui caedere, to kill oneself) is primarily the act of intentionally
terminating one's own life, though it is also used as a metaphor for the "willful
destruction of one's self-interest" either as an individual or as a
group. Suicide may occur for a number of reasons, including
depression,
shame, pain, financial
difficulties, or other undesirable situations. Nearly one million
people worldwide die by suicide annually. There are an estimated 10
to 20 million attempted suicides every year.
Views on suicide have been influenced by cultural
views on existential themes such as religion, honor, and the meaning of
life. Most Western and some Asian religions—the Abrahamic
religions, Hinduism—consider
suicide a dishonorable act; in the West it was regarded as a
serious crime
and offense against God due to religious
belief in the sanctity
of life. Japanese views on
honor and religion led to seppuku, one of the most painful
methods of suicide, to be respected as a means to atone for
mistakes or failure or a form of protest during the samurai era. In the 20th
century, suicide in the form of self-immolation
has been used as a form of protest, and in the form of kamikaze and suicide
bombing as a military or terrorist tactic. Sati was
a Hindu funeral practice
in which the widow would
immolate
herself on her husband’s funeral pyre.
Medically assisted
suicide (euthanasia, or the right to
die) is a controversial ethical issue involving people
who are terminally
ill, in extreme pain,
and/or have minimal quality of
life through injury
or illness. Self-sacrifice
for others is not usually considered suicide, as the goal is not to
kill oneself but to save another.
The predominant view of modern medicine is that
suicide is a mental
health concern, associated with psychological factors such as
the difficulty of coping with depression,
inescapable suffering
or fear, or other mental
disorders and pressures. Suicide is sometimes interpreted in
this framework as a "cry for help" and attention, or to express
despair and the wish to
escape, rather than a genuine intent to die. Most people who
attempt suicide do not complete suicide on a first attempt; those
who later gain a history of repetitions are significantly more at
risk of eventual completion.
Suicidal phenomena
Suicidal ideation
Suicidal ideation is a medical term for thoughts about suicide, which may range from vague or unformed urges to meticulously detailed plans and posthumous instructions. The condition requires professional intervention to determine its extent, including the presence of a suicide plan and the patient's means to commit suicide. Severe suicidal ideation is a medical emergency requiring immediate treatment.Suicidal gestures and attempts
Sometimes, a person will make actions resembling suicide attempts while not being fully committed. This is called a suicidal gesture. Prototypical methods might be a non-lethal method of self-harm that leaves obvious signs of the attempt, or simply a lethal action at a time when the person considers it likely that he/she will be rescued or prevented from fully carrying it out.On the other hand, a person who genuinely wishes
to die may survive, due to lack of knowledge, unwillingness to try
methods that may end in permanent damage to her- or himself (in the
event of an attempt which does not result in death), unwillingness
to try methods which may harm others, an unanticipated rescue,
among other reasons. There may be conflict, whereby a genuinely
suicidal person can be desperate enough to want to kill themselves
but at the same time, too afraid to go through with the extreme
measures that are needed to guarantee death. It may be incorrect to
state that a person who survived an overdose was issuing a 'cry for
help' when in reality it was a suicide attempt that simply did not
result in death. This highlights a basic fact that it is not easy
to kill oneself in a way that is not traumatic or painful, hence
the phenomenon of assisted suicides. This is referred to as a
suicide attempt.
Distinguishing between a suicide attempt and a
suicidal gesture may be difficult. Intent and motivation are not
always fully discernible since so many people in a suicidal state
are genuinely conflicted over whether they wish to end their lives.
One approach, assuming that a sufficiently strong suicide intent
will ensure death, considers all near-suicides to be suicidal
gestures. This, however, does not explain why so many people whose
suicide attempts do not result in death end up with severe
injuries, often permanent, which are most likely undesirable to
those who are making a suicidal gesture. (See: self-harming.)
Another possibility is those wishing merely to make a suicidal
gesture may end up accidentally killing themselves, perhaps by
underestimating the lethality of the method chosen or by
overestimating the possibility of external intervention by others.
Suicide-like acts should generally be treated as seriously as
possible, because if there is an insufficiently strong reaction
from loved ones from a suicidal gesture, this may motivate future
and ultimately more committed attempts.
In the technical literature the use of the terms
parasuicide, or deliberate self-harm (DSH) are preferred
– both of these terms avoid the question of the intent of
the actions.
Nearly half of all suicides are preceded by an
attempt at suicide that does not end in death. Those with a history
of such attempts are 23 times more likely to eventually end their
own lives than those without. Those who attempt to harm themselves
are, as a group, quite different from those who actually die from
suicide; females attempt suicide much more frequently than males,
however males are four times more likely to die from their
attempt.
Suicide crisis
A suicide being attempted, or a situation in
which a person is seriously contemplating suicide or has strong
suicidal
thoughts, is considered by public safety authorities to be a
medical
emergency requiring suicide
intervention.
Suicide note
A suicide note is a written message left by
someone who attempts, or dies by suicide, though a large number of
people who complete suicide do not leave one. Studies give
inconsistent results as to the proportion of people who leave
suicide notes - with a range of approx. 12 to 37%. Motivations for
leaving a note range widely, from seeking closure
with loved ones to exacting revenge against others by blaming them
for the decision. It may also contain a few sentences apologizing
to those they have left behind.
Related phenomena
Euthanasia
Individuals who wish to end their own life may
enlist the assistance of another person to achieve death, e.g. by a
deadly poison. The other person, usually a family member or
physician, may help carry out the act if the individual lacks the
physical capacity to do so even with the supplied means. According
to different moral views, this may not be considered a form of
suicide. The assistant may think of it as acting in behalf of the
individual, perhaps to end suffering, while opponents regard it as
akin to murder. Assisted
suicide is a contentious moral and political issue in many
countries, as seen in the scandal surrounding Dr. Jack
Kevorkian, a medical practitioner who supported euthanasia, was
found to have helped patients end their own lives, and was
sentenced to jail time.
Murder-suicide
The motivation for the murder in murder-suicide can be purely criminal in nature or be perceived by the perpetrator as an act of care for loved ones in the context of severe depression. The severely depressed person may see the world as a terrible place and can feel that they are helping those they care about by removing them from it. Thoughts like this are generally regarded as a medical emergency requiring suicide intervention. Since crime just prior to suicide is often perceived as being without consequences, it is not uncommon for suicide to be linked with homicide. Motivations may range from guilt to evading punishment, insanity, part of a suicide pact, or exacting revenge on those whom they feel are responsible.A famous example of murder-suicide is the double
murder-suicide of professional wrestler Chris
Benoit, who was found hanging in his home along with the bodies
of his wife and son.
A murder-suicide is an act in which an individual
kills one or more other persons immediately before, at the same
time as, or after killing him or herself.
The combination of murder and suicide can take
various forms, including:
- Suicide to facilitate murder, as in suicide bombing
- Suicide after murder to escape punishment
- Suicide after murder as a form of self-punishment due to guilt
- Having a combined objective of suicide and murder
- Considering one's suicide as the main act, but murdering one's children first, to avoid them becoming orphans, to be together in an expected afterlife, in the context of severe depression where the person feels he is sparing his loved ones from a horrible life, or simply just to experience the act
- Joint suicide in the form of killing the other with consent, and then killing oneself
- Punishment - taking revenge on those deemed responsible and escaping the world seen as a terrible place, as in many school shootings
- Some cases of cult suicide may also involve murder. Conversely, many spree killings have ended in suicide.
Suicide attack
A suicide attack is when an attacker perpetrates
an act of violence against others, typically to achieve a military
or political goal, that foreseeably results in his or her own death
as well. Suicide bombings have been prominent in the news in recent
years as an act of terrorism. Other historical examples include the
assassination of Tsar
Alexander II and the in part successful kamikaze (Divine Wind) attacks
by Japanese air pilots during the Second World
War. As the WW2 progressed some pilots where locked into their
cockpits to prevent escape. In that situation, the Japanese almost
always chose to die with honor in an attempt to take out an
aircraft carrier in the Carrier War. They tended to aim for the
elevators which, when crippled, would stop the carrier from
launching planes.
Self-injury
Self-injury is not a suicide attempt; however, initially self-injury was erroneously classified as a suicide attempt. There is a non-causal correlation between self-harm and suicide; both are most commonly a joint effect of depression.Suicide methods
In countries where firearms are readily available,
many suicides involve the use of firearms. Over 52% of suicides
that occurred in the United States in 2005 were by firearm.
Asphyxiation
methods (including hanging) and toxification
(poisoning and
overdose) are fairly
common as well. Both comprised about 40% of suicides in the U.S.
during the same time period. Other methods of suicide include
blunt
force trauma (jumping from a building or bridge, stepping in
front of a train, or car collision, for example). Exsanguination
or bloodletting (slitting one's wrist or throat), intentional
drowning,
self-immolation, electrocution,
and intentional starvation are other suicide
methods.
Reasons for suicide
Causes of suicide
There are a variety of reasons posited or given for suicide:- Mental disorders
- Suffering
- Unrequited love
- Stress
- Grief
- withdrawal or discontinuation of psychoactive substances.
- As philosophically or ideologically motivated move
- To escape punishment or an abusive environment
- Guilt or shame
- Catastrophic injury
- Financial loss
- Self sacrifice
- As part of a military or social strategy (e.g. suicide attacks)
- Belief that life has no inherent value (e.g. absurdism, pessimism, nihilism)
- As part of a religious cult
- Loneliness
- To restore honor (e.g. seppuku)
- Curiosity for post-life occurrences.
Suicide and mental illness
Studies show a high incidence of psychiatric
disorders in suicide victims at the time of their death with
the total figure ranging from 98% to 87.3% with mood
disorders and substance
abuse being the two most common. In schizophrenia suicide can
be triggered by either the depression that is common with this
disorder, or in response to command auditory hallucinations.
Suicide among people suffering from bipolar
disorder is often an impulse, which is due to the sufferer's
extreme mood swings (one of the main symptoms of bipolar disorder),
or also possibly an outcome of delusions occurring during an
episode of mania or
psychotic
depression. Severe depression is considered a terminal illness
due to the likelihood of suicide when left untreated.
Epidemiology
According to official statistics, about a million people die by suicide annually, more than those murdered or killed in war. According to 2005 data, suicides in the U.S. outnumber homicides by nearly 2 to 1 and ranks as the 11th leading cause of death in the country, ahead of liver disease and Parkinson's disease.Gender and suicide: In the Western world,
males die much more often
by means of suicide than do females, although females attempt
suicide more often. This pattern has held for at least a century.
Some medical professionals believe this stems from the fact that
males are more likely to end their lives through effective violent
means (guns, knives, hanging, etc.), while
women primarily use more failure-prone methods such as overdosing
on medications; again, this has been the case for at least a
century.
Others ascribe the difference to inherent
differences in male/female psychology. Greater social stigma
against male depression and a lack of social networks of support
and help with depression are often identified as key reasons for
men's disproportionately higher level of suicides, since suicide as
a "cry for help" is not seen by men as an equally viable option.
Typically males die from suicide three to four times more often as
females, and not unusually five or more times as often.
Excess male mortality from suicide is also
evident from data from non-western countries. In 1979–81, 74
territories reported one or more cases of suicides. Two of these
reported equal rates for both sexes: Seychelles and
Kenya. Three
territories reported female rates exceeding male rates: Papua New
Guinea, Macau, French
Guiana. The remaining 69 territories had male suicide rates
greater than female suicide rates.
Barraclough found that the female rates of those
aged 5–14 equaled or exceeded the male rates only in 14 countries,
mainly in South
America and Asia.
National suicide rates sometimes tend to remain
stable. For example, the 1975 rates for Australia, Denmark,
England, France, Norway, and Switzerland were within 3.0 per
100,000 of population from the 1875 rates. The rates in 1910–14 and
in 1960 differed less than 2.5 per 100,000 of the population in
Australia, Belgium, Denmark, England and Wales, Ireland, Japan, New
Zealand, Norway, Scotland, South Africa, Spain, Sweden, and the
Netherlands. There are considerable differences in national suicide
rates among various countries. Findings from two studies showed a
range from 0 to more than 40 suicides per 100,000 of
population.
National suicide rates, apparently universally,
show a long-term upward trend. This trend has been well-documented
in European countries. The trend for national suicide rates to rise
slowly over time might be an indirect result of the gradual
reduction in deaths from other causes, i.e. falling death rates
from causes other than suicide uncover a previously hidden
predisposition towards suicide. There may also be an explanation in
the reduced stigma attached to survivors as suicide is no longer a
crime or a sin. This may allow coroners to record more suicides as
such and so increase stats.
Ethnic groups and suicide: In the USA,
Asian-Americans are more likely to die by suicide than any other
ethnic group. Caucasians
die by suicide more often than African
Americans do. This is true for both genders. Non-Hispanic
Caucasians are nearly 2.5 times more likely to kill themselves than
are African Americans or Hispanics.
Age and suicide: In the USA, males over the age
of seventy die by suicide more often than younger males. There is
no such trend for females. Older non-Hispanic Caucasian men are
much more likely to kill themselves than older men or women of any
other group, which contributes to the relatively high suicide rate
among Caucasians.
Season and suicide: People die by suicide more
often during spring and summer. The idea that suicide is more
common during the winter holidays (including Christmas in the
northern
hemisphere) is a common misconception. There is also potential
risk of suicide in some people experiencing
Seasonal affective disorder.
Other reasons
Suicide as a form of defiance and protest
Heroic suicide, for the greater good of others,
is often celebrated. For instance, Mahatma
Gandhi went on a hunger
strike to prevent fighting between Hindus and Muslims, and,
although he was stopped before dying, it appeared he would have
willingly succumbed to starvation. This attracted attention to
Gandhi's cause, and generated a great deal of respect for him as a
spiritual leader. In the 1960s, Buddhist monks, most notably Thích Quảng
Đức, in South
Vietnam
drew Western
attention to their protests against President
Ngô Đình Diệm by burning themselves to death. Also in the
1960s, Quaker Norman
Morrison committed suicide by self-immolation to protest the
United States involvement in the Vietnam War.
Similar events were reported during the Cold War in
eastern
Europe, such as the deaths of Ryszard
Siwiec and later of Jan Palach and
Jan
Zajíc following the Soviet
invasion of Czechoslovakia,
or Romas
Kalanta's self-immolation in the main street of Kaunas, Lithuania in
1972. More recently, in 2006, an American anti-war activist,
Malachi
Ritscher, died by suicide by self-immolation as a protest
against the Iraq
war. In Ireland there exists a long tradition of hunger strike
to the death against British rule, predominantly in Northern
Ireland during the infamous 1981 hunger strikes, led by Bobby Sands,
which resulted in 10 deaths. The period caused international
outrage as shown, for example, by the Indian parliament standing
for two minutes of silence or, more bemusingly, the Iranian
government renaming the street in Tehran on which the British
Embassy stands to "Bobby Sands Street", named after the first
hunger-striker to die in 1981. Before the Republic of Ireland got
its independence there were also examples of hunger striking, such
as Terence
McSwiney in Cork. Critics
may see such suicides as counter-productive, arguing that these
people would probably achieve a comparable or greater result by
spending the rest of their lives in active struggle. This is a
contentious issue, especially when one considers that the Northern
Ireland hunger strikers who died trying to obtain certain prisoners
rights (e.g. POW status, right to wear own clothes, right not to
have to work, etc.) actually had nearly all their requests
eventually granted in the years after the spate of 1981 hunger
strikes happened.
People who commit suicide may not always be
suffering from depression or despair. Some people may kill
themselves for the purpose of experiencing life after death, or
have a different existential, religious or philosophical motive.
This points out that views of suicide are individually and
culturally subjective.
Judicial suicide
A person who has committed a crime will often commit suicide to avoid prosecution and disgrace:- Colonel Alfred Redl was presented with the evidence of his espionage and shot himself to avoid a trial.
- In The Unpleasantness at the Bellona Club, Lord Peter Wimsey presents Dr. Penberthy with evidence proving that he is a murderer, then leaves him in a room with a loaded gun. A shot rings out, and the club members rush in to find the dead doctor, along with a signed confession.
- Budd Dwyer, a Pennsylvanian politician, killed himself on live television after being convicted (wrongly, he claimed) of financial crimes, in order to draw attention to his case, and to enable his widow to draw survivor benefits (since he died before being removed from office).
- More recently, Deborah Jeane Palfrey, dubbed the DC Madam by the media, was convicted on April 15, 2008 of racketeering, using the mail for illegal purposes, and money laundering. On May 1, 2008 she was found dead by hanging and apparent suicide.
Military suicide
In the desperate final days of World War II, many Japanese pilots volunteered for kamikaze missions in an attempt to forestall defeat for the Empire. Near the end of WW2 the Japanese attempted to design a small bomb laden aircraft whose only purpose was kamikaze missions. However, the craft was a failure, partly because its range was insubstantual to that of other more conventional planes but also because it was produced at a far greater cost than even the Japanese felt necessary to spend on their kamikaze pilots. In Nazi Germany, many soldiers and government officials (including Adolf Hitler and many in his inner circle) killed themselves rather than surrender to Allied forces; Luftwaffe squadrons were formed to smash into American B-17s during daylight bombing missions, in order to delay the highly-probable Allied victory, although in this case, inspiration was primarily the Soviet and Polish taran ramming attacks, and death of the pilot was not a desired outcome. Whether such pilots were engaging in heroic, selfless actions or if immense social pressure motivated them is a matter of historical debate. The Japanese also built one-man "human torpedo" suicide submarines. However, suicide has been fairly common in warfare throughout history. Soldiers and civilians committed suicide to avoid capture and slavery (including the wave of German and Japanese suicides in the last days of World War II). Commanders committed suicide rather than accept defeat. Spies and officers have often committed suicide to avoid revealing secrets under interrogation and/or torture. Behaviour that could be seen as suicidal occurred often in battle, for instance a soldier falling on a grenade to save his comrades. Other examples include soldiers under cannon fire at the Battle of Waterloo who took fatal hits rather than duck and place their comrades in harm's way. The Charge of the Light Brigade in the Crimean War, Pickett's Charge at Gettysburg in the American Civil War, and the charge of the French cavalry at the Battle of Sedan in the Franco-Prussian War were assaults that continued even after it was obvious to participants that the attacks were unlikely to succeed, and would probably be fatal to most of the attackers. Japanese infantrymen usually fought to the last man, launched "banzai" suicide charges, and committed suicide during the Pacific island battles in World War II. At Saipan and Okinawa, civilians joined in the suicides. Suicidal attacks by pilots were common in the 20th century: the attack by U.S. torpedo planes at the Battle of Midway was very similar to kamikaze.Ritual suicide
Ritual suicide is the act of suicide motivated by
a religious, spiritual, or traditional ritual.
An extreme interpretation of Hindu custom
historically practiced, mostly in the 2nd millennium, was
self-immolation by a widow as an assurance that she will be with
her husband for the next life. This, however, is extreme, and is
looked down upon by other Hindus in most cases. Other rituals of
self-immolation or self-starvation were used by Hindu, Jain and Buddhist
monks for religious or philosophical purposes, or as a form of
extreme non-violent protest. In China, some groups would practice
suicide for similar reasons. In Japan, rituals of suicide like
seppuku by men and
jigai by women were
practiced.
Dutiful suicide
Dutiful suicide is an act, or attempted act, of
fatal self-violence at one's own hands done in the belief that it
will secure a greater good, rather than to escape harsh or
impossible conditions. It can be voluntary, to relieve some
dishonor or punishment, or imposed by threats of death or reprisals
on one's family or reputation (a kind of murder by remote control).
It can be culturally traditional or generally abhorred; it can be
heavily ritualized as in seppuku or purely functional. Dutiful
suicide can be distinguished from a kamikaze or suicide bomb
attack, in which a fighter consumes his own life in delivering a
weapon to the enemy. Perhaps the most famous example of dutiful
suicide is a soldier in a foxhole throwing his body on a live
grenade to save the lives of his comrades.
Examples
- Disgraced Roman patricians were sometimes allowed to commit suicide to spare themselves a trial and penalties against their families.
- Erwin Rommel, found to have foreknowledge of the German attempt on Hitler's life, was threatened with public trial, execution and reprisals on his family unless he killed himself, which he did.
Impact of suicide
It is estimated that each suicide in the United States leaves an average of six people intimately affected by the death, either as a spouse, parent, significant other, sibling, or child of the deceased person. These people are referred to as survivors. Of course, this estimate does not represent the total number of people who may be affected by an individual suicide. For example, the suicide of a child may leave not only his/her immediate family to make sense of the act, but also his/her extended family, school and entire community.As with any death, family and friends of a
suicide victim feel grief
associated with loss. However, suicide deaths leave behind a unique
set of issues for the survivors. Suicide survivors are often
overwhelmed with psychological
trauma that vary depending on the factors comprising the event,
including discovery of the body. The survivor's trauma can leave
him/her feeling guilty, angry, remorseful, helpless, and
confused. It can be
especially difficult for survivors because many of their questions
as to the victim's final decision are left unanswered, even if a
suicide note is left behind (the "why" questions). Moreover,
survivors often feel that they should have intervened in some way
to prevent the suicide, even if the suicide comes as a surprise and
there are no obvious warning signs (the "coulda, shoulda, woulda"
or "if only" questions). Along with this sense of regret and
failure, there is sometimes relief if the survivor's relationship
with the victim was difficult, strained, or otherwise complicated.
Given this complex and conflicting set of emotions associated with
a loved one's suicide, survivors usually find it difficult to
discuss the death with others, even with those who have also faced
the death of a loved one, but by some other means. These feelings
cause survivors to feel isolated from their network of family and
friends and often making them reluctant to form new relationships
as well.
Fortunately, "survivor support groups" can offer
counseling and help bring many of the issues associated with
suicide out into the open. They can also help survivors reach out
to their own friends and family who may be feeling similarly and
thus begin the healing process. In addition, counseling services
and therapy can provide invaluable support to the bereaved. Some
such groups can be found online, providing a forum for discussion
amongst survivors of suicide.
Economic impact
Deaths and injuries from suicidal behavior represent $25 billion each year in direct costs, including health care services, funeral services, autopsies and investigations, and indirect costs like lost productivity.These costs may be counterbalanced by economic
gains. Expenditure on those who would have continued living is
reduced, including pensions, social security, health care services
for those with brain disorders ("mentally ill"), as well as other
normal budgetary expenditure per head of living population.
Views on suicide
Medical
Modern medicine treats suicide as a mental health
issue. Overwhelming or persistent suicidal thoughts are considered
an emotional crisis. Mental health professionals advise that people
who have expressed plans to kill themselves be encouraged to seek
help. This is especially relevant if the means (weapons, drugs, or
other methods) are available, or if the patient has crafted a
detailed plan for executing the suicide. Medical personnel and
mental health professionals frequently receive special training to
look for suicidal signs in patients. Individuals suffering from
depression are considered a high-risk group for suicidal behavior.
Suicide hotlines are widely available for people seeking help
anonymously.
In the United States, individuals who express the
intent to harm themselves are automatically determined to lack the
present mental capacity to refuse treatment, and can be transported
to the emergency
department against their will. An emergency
physician will determine whether inpatient care at a mental
health care facility is warranted. This is sometimes referred
to as being "committed".
A court hearing may be held to determine the patient's competence.
Criminal
In some jurisdictions, an act or incomplete act
of suicide is considered to be a crime. More commonly, a surviving
party member who assisted in the suicide attempt will face criminal
charges.
In Brazil, if the help
is directed to a minor, the penalty is applied in its double and
not considered as homicide. In Italy and Canada, instigating
another to suicide is also a criminal offense. In Singapore,
assisting in the suicide of a mentally handicapped person is a
capital offense. In India, abetting
suicide of a minor or a mentally challenged person can result in a
possible death penalty, otherwise a maximum 10 years prison
term.
In North Korea,
suicide is considered treason against
the party and is punishable by death. Due to Kim Il
Sung's decree that the seed of class enemies should be
destroyed to the third generation, families of
persons who have committed suicide are sent to labor camps
with life
sentences.
Cultural
In the Warring States Period and the Edo period
of Japan, samurai who
disgraced their honor chose to end their own lives by seppuku, a
method in which the samurai takes a sword and slices into his
abdomen, causing a fatal
injury. The cut is usually performed diagonally from the top corner
of the samurai's writing hand, and has long been considered an
honorable form of death (even when done to punish dishonor). Though
such a wound would be fatal, seppuku was not always technically
suicide, as the samurai's assistant (the kaishaku) would usually
stand by to cut short any suffering by quickly administering a
fatal cut to the back of the neck (just short of decapitation), sometimes as
soon as the first tiny incision into the abdomen was made.
Religious
In most forms of Christianity,
suicide is considered a sin, based mainly on the writings of
influential Christian thinkers of the Middle Ages,
such as St.
Augustine and St.
Thomas Aquinas; suicide was not considered a sin under the
Byzantine
Christian code of
Justinian, for instance.. The argument is based on the commandment
"Thou shalt not kill" (made applicable under the New Covenant
by Jesus in
Matthew
19:18), as well as the idea that life is a gift given by God
which should not be spurned, and that suicide is against the
"natural order" and thus interferes with God's master plan for the
world. However, it is believed that mental illness or grave fear of
suffering diminishes the responsibility of the one completing
suicide. Counter-arguments include the following: that the sixth
commandment is more accurately translated as "thou shalt not
murder", not necessarily applying to the self; that taking one's
own life no more violates God's plan than does curing a disease;
and that a number of suicides by followers of God are recorded in
the Bible with no dire condemnation.
Judaism focuses on
the importance of valuing this life, and as such, suicide is
tantamount to denying God's goodness in the world. Despite this,
under extreme circumstances when there has seemed no choice but to
either be killed or forced to betray their religion, Jews have
committed individual suicide or mass suicide
(see Masada,
First French persecution of the Jews, and York Castle
for examples) and as a grim reminder there is even a prayer in the
Jewish liturgy for "when the knife is at the throat", for those
dying "to sanctify God's Name". (See: Martyrdom). These
acts have received mixed responses by Jewish authorities, regarded
both as examples of heroic martyrdom, whilst others state that it
was wrong for them to take their own lives in anticipation of
martyrdom.
Suicide is not allowed in the religion of
Islam;
however, martyring oneself for Allah (during combat) is not the
same as completing suicide. Suicide by Muslim standards is
traditionally seen as a sign of disbelief in God. The use of
suicide bombing is therefore a controversial one in Islam. Groups
like Hamas
consider it necessary—for instance, in the struggle against
occupation.
In Hinduism, suicide
is frowned upon and is considered equally sinful as murdering
another. Hindu
Scriptures state that one who commits suicide will become part
of the spirit world, wandering earth until the time one would have
otherwise died, had one not committed suicide. The ghost can feel
hunger and thirst, but can not eat or drink.
Debate over suicide
Some see suicide as a legitimate matter of personal choice and a human right (colloquially known as the right to die movement), and maintain that no one should be forced to suffer against their will, particularly from conditions such as incurable disease, mental illness, and old age that have no possibility of improvement. Proponents of this view reject the belief that suicide is always irrational, arguing instead that it can be a valid last resort for those enduring major pain or trauma. This perspective is most popular in continental Europe, where euthanasia and other such topics are commonly discussed in parliament, although it has a good deal of support in the United States as well.A narrower segment of this group considers
suicide something between a grave but condonable choice in some
circumstances and a sacrosanct right for anyone (even a young and
healthy person) who believes they have rationally and
conscientiously come to the decision to end their own lives.
Notable supporters of this school of thought include German
pessimist philosopher Arthur
Schopenhauer, and Scottish empiricist David Hume.
Adherents of this view often advocate the abrogation of statutes
that restrict the liberties of people known to be suicidal, such as
laws permitting their involuntary commitment to mental
hospitals.
See also
- Stamp Out Suicide
- alt.suicide.holiday
- American Foundation for Suicide Prevention
- Cult suicide
- National Suicide Prevention Lifeline
- Mass suicide
- Mercy killing
- Jack Kevorkian
- Meaning of life
- Quantum suicide
- Russian roulette
- Samaritans (charity)
- Senicide
- Suicide Act 1961
- Suicide attack
- Suicide (book)
- Suicide booth
- Suicide bridge
- Suicide methods
- Suicide note
- Suicide Prevention Action Network USA
- Suicide watch
- Terminal illness
- Farmers' suicides in India
Footnotes
Further reading
- Night Falls Fast: Understanding Suicide
- Suicide: a study in sociology
- Suicide across the life span: premature exits
- Suicide and attempted suicide
External links
suicide in Afrikaans: Selfmoord
suicide in Arabic: انتحار
suicide in Bosnian: Samoubistvo
suicide in Bulgarian: Самоубийство
suicide in Catalan: Suïcidi
suicide in Czech: Sebevražda
suicide in Welsh: Hunanladdiad
suicide in Danish: Selvmord
suicide in German: Suizid
suicide in Estonian: Enesetapp
suicide in Modern Greek (1453-):
Αυτοκτονία
suicide in Spanish: Suicidio
suicide in Esperanto: Sinmortigo
suicide in Basque: Buru-hilketa
suicide in Persian: خودکشی
suicide in French: Suicide
suicide in Galician: Suicidio
suicide in Korean: 자살
suicide in Croatian: Samoubojstvo
suicide in Indonesian: Bunuh diri
suicide in Icelandic: Sjálfsmorð
suicide in Italian: Suicidio
suicide in Hebrew: התאבדות
suicide in Latin: Suicidium
suicide in Lithuanian: Savižudybė
suicide in Hungarian: Öngyilkosság
suicide in Malayalam: ആത്മഹത്യ
suicide in Dutch: Zelfmoord
suicide in Dutch Low Saxon: Zölfmoord
suicide in Japanese: 自殺
suicide in Norwegian: Selvmord
suicide in Norwegian Nynorsk: Sjølvmord
suicide in Uzbek: Xudkushlik
suicide in Polish: Samobójstwo
suicide in Portuguese: Suicídio
suicide in Romanian: Sinucidere
suicide in Russian: Самоубийство
suicide in Albanian: Vetëvrasja
suicide in Simple English: Suicide
suicide in Slovak: Samovražda
suicide in Slovenian: Samomor
suicide in Serbian: Самоубиство
suicide in Serbo-Croatian: Samoubistvo
suicide in Finnish: Itsemurha
suicide in Swedish: Självmord
suicide in Thai: การฆ่าตัวตาย
suicide in Vietnamese: Tự sát
suicide in Turkish: İntihar
suicide in Ukrainian: Самогубство
suicide in Urdu: خود کشی
suicide in Yiddish: זעלבסטמארד
suicide in Contenese: 自殺
suicide in Samogitian: Savėžodībė
suicide in Chinese: 自殺
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
aborticide, car of Jagannath,
disembowelment,
felo-de-se, fratricide, fungicide, genocide, germicide, hara-kiri, herbicide, homicide, infanticide, insecticide, mass suicide,
matricide, microbicide, parricide, patricide, pesticide, regicide, ritual suicide,
rodenticide,
self-destruction, self-immolation, self-murder, self-sacrifice,
seppuku, sororicide, suttee, sutteeism, uxoricide, vermicide