CDC: Adolescents most liekly to have self-inflicted wounds
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Posted 4:45PM on Thursday, May 23, 2002
ATLANTA - Adolescents show up at hospital emergency rooms with self-inflicted injuries -- usually suicide attempts -- more often than any other age group. <br>
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A study by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released today said hospitals in the United States treated 264,108 non-fatal, self-inflicted wounds in 2000. The study did not include fatal wounds. <br>
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It found one self-inflicted injury for every 389 people age 15 to 19 in 2000. People age 20 to 24 were next, with one injury for every 423 people. <br>
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The study is useful to public health officials because it can point them to the groups who are most likely to try to harm themselves -- even if it's only for attention. <br>
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The study found that for all age groups, roughly 60 percent of all self-inflicted wounds are probable suicide attempts. The CDC estimates about 29,000 people commit suicide every year in the United States. <br>
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The study also found that women are nearly 30 percent more likely than men to arrive at a hospital with a self-inflicted wound. <br>
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Poisonings accounts for two-thirds of all non-deadly, self-inflicted wounds in the hospital study, and cuts accounted for about one-fourth. Gunshot wounds accounted for one percent.