Suicide: Closing the Exits

Suicide prevention is a major goal of the Public Health Service of the US government. This has been the case since the 1960s when the National Institute of Mental Health established a center for the study and prevention of suicide. Since then, however, the knowledge and research gathered has not bought about the reduction of suicide. Suicide: Closing the Exits was written to change this trend.

This book reports a program of research concerned with preventing suicide by restricting access to lethal agents, such as guns, drugs, and carbon monoxide. It may seem implausible that deeply unhappy people could be prevented from killing themselves by "closing the exits," but the idea is not a new one and has been discussed widely in the literature.

The authors argue that restricting access to lethal agents should be considered a major preventive strategy, along with the psychiatric treatment of depressed and suicidal individuals and the establishment of suicide prevention centers to counsel those in crisis. Suicide represents a major contribution to the literature. As such, it should be read by all medical practitioners, policy makers, and psychologists.

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Suicide: Closing the Exits

Suicide prevention is a major goal of the Public Health Service of the US government. This has been the case since the 1960s when the National Institute of Mental Health established a center for the study and prevention of suicide. Since then, however, the knowledge and research gathered has not bought about the reduction of suicide. Suicide: Closing the Exits was written to change this trend.

This book reports a program of research concerned with preventing suicide by restricting access to lethal agents, such as guns, drugs, and carbon monoxide. It may seem implausible that deeply unhappy people could be prevented from killing themselves by "closing the exits," but the idea is not a new one and has been discussed widely in the literature.

The authors argue that restricting access to lethal agents should be considered a major preventive strategy, along with the psychiatric treatment of depressed and suicidal individuals and the establishment of suicide prevention centers to counsel those in crisis. Suicide represents a major contribution to the literature. As such, it should be read by all medical practitioners, policy makers, and psychologists.

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Suicide: Closing the Exits

Suicide: Closing the Exits

by Ronald V. Clarke (Editor)
Suicide: Closing the Exits

Suicide: Closing the Exits

by Ronald V. Clarke (Editor)

eBook

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Overview

Suicide prevention is a major goal of the Public Health Service of the US government. This has been the case since the 1960s when the National Institute of Mental Health established a center for the study and prevention of suicide. Since then, however, the knowledge and research gathered has not bought about the reduction of suicide. Suicide: Closing the Exits was written to change this trend.

This book reports a program of research concerned with preventing suicide by restricting access to lethal agents, such as guns, drugs, and carbon monoxide. It may seem implausible that deeply unhappy people could be prevented from killing themselves by "closing the exits," but the idea is not a new one and has been discussed widely in the literature.

The authors argue that restricting access to lethal agents should be considered a major preventive strategy, along with the psychiatric treatment of depressed and suicidal individuals and the establishment of suicide prevention centers to counsel those in crisis. Suicide represents a major contribution to the literature. As such, it should be read by all medical practitioners, policy makers, and psychologists.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781351487504
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Publication date: 07/12/2017
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 149
File size: 5 MB

About the Author

Ronald V. Clarke

Table of Contents

Introduction to the Transaction Edition Preface 1. Preventing Suicide The Nature of the Problem Strategies for Preventing Suicide Reducing Access to Lethal Agents The Research Plan The Ethics of Preventing Suicide Conclusions 2. Detoxification of Domestic Gas Detoxification in England and Wales (Study 1) Detoxification in Scotland and the Netherlands (Study 2) Detoxification in the United States (Study 3) Conclusions 3. The Toxicity of Car Exhaust Car Exhaust Suicides in the United States (Study 4) Comparison of the United States and Great Britain (Study 5) Conclusions 4. Firearm Availability and Suicide Suicide and Estimates of Gun Availability in the United States (Study 6) A Further Attempt to Estimate Gun Availability (Study 7) A Comparison of the United States and Australia (Study 8) Gun Ownership in the United States and Suicide Rates from 1959 to 1984 (Study 9) Conclusions 5. Handgun Control Statutes Earlier Research on Gun Control Laws Coding and Scaling the Gun Laws Handgun Control and Deaths from Suicide (Study 10) Characteristics of The Handgun Laws (Study 11) Availability of Guns and Moral Opposition to Suicide (Study 12) Conclusions 6. Displacement Between Methods The Concept of Displacement Evidence from the Present Studies Availability of Drugs Conclusions 7. Explaining Choice of Method Availability and Accessibility Suggestion and Symbolism Personal Requirements and Cultural Norms Choice Structuring Properties of Methods of Suicide Perception of Different Methods (Study 13) Reasons for Choice of Method (Study 14) Conclusions 8. Implications for Theory and Prevention A Decision Theory of Suicide A Public Health Approach to Prevention Suicide-Proofing the Environment Reducing Acceptability and Suggestion Conclusions References Index
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