Background: National mortality statistics should be comparable between countries that use the World Health Organization's International Classification of Diseases. Distinguishing between manners of death, especially suicides and accidents, is a challenge. Knowledge about accidents is important in prevention of both accidents and suicides. The aim of the present study was to assess the reliability of classifying deaths as accidents and undetermined manner of deaths in the three Scandinavian countries and to compare cross-national differences. Methods: The cause of death registers in Norway, Sweden and Denmark provided data from 2008 for samples of 600 deaths from each country, of which 200 were registered as suicides, 200 as accidents or und...
Mortality statistics are much used although their accuracy is often questioned. Producers of mortali...
Objective: To compare the drowning mortality rates and proportion of deaths of each intent among all...
BACKGROUND: Concerns about the risk-benefit ratio of treatment with antidepressants in the light...
Background: National mortality statistics should be comparable between countries that use the World ...
Background National mortality statistics should be comparable between countries that...
OBJECTIVE: Valid mortality statistics are important for healthcare planning and research. Suicides a...
Background: Several studies have concluded that some deaths classified as undetermined intent are in...
Abstract Background: An autopsy is still the most accurate method to determine the cause of death. B...
Background: The extent of post-mortem detection of specific psychoactive drugs may differ between co...
Abstract Background The extent of post-mortem detection of specific psychoactive drugs may differ be...
To access publisher full text version of this article. Please click on the hyperlink in Additional L...
Background Reliable suicide statistics are a prerequisite for suicide monitoring and...
Do we need to be cautious in evaluating suicide statistics? Misclassifications result in under-repor...
Underlying patterns and factors behind suicides of patients in treatment are still unclear and there...
Aims: Forensic autopsies are important for the investigation of deaths with a legal or public-healt...
Mortality statistics are much used although their accuracy is often questioned. Producers of mortali...
Objective: To compare the drowning mortality rates and proportion of deaths of each intent among all...
BACKGROUND: Concerns about the risk-benefit ratio of treatment with antidepressants in the light...
Background: National mortality statistics should be comparable between countries that use the World ...
Background National mortality statistics should be comparable between countries that...
OBJECTIVE: Valid mortality statistics are important for healthcare planning and research. Suicides a...
Background: Several studies have concluded that some deaths classified as undetermined intent are in...
Abstract Background: An autopsy is still the most accurate method to determine the cause of death. B...
Background: The extent of post-mortem detection of specific psychoactive drugs may differ between co...
Abstract Background The extent of post-mortem detection of specific psychoactive drugs may differ be...
To access publisher full text version of this article. Please click on the hyperlink in Additional L...
Background Reliable suicide statistics are a prerequisite for suicide monitoring and...
Do we need to be cautious in evaluating suicide statistics? Misclassifications result in under-repor...
Underlying patterns and factors behind suicides of patients in treatment are still unclear and there...
Aims: Forensic autopsies are important for the investigation of deaths with a legal or public-healt...
Mortality statistics are much used although their accuracy is often questioned. Producers of mortali...
Objective: To compare the drowning mortality rates and proportion of deaths of each intent among all...
BACKGROUND: Concerns about the risk-benefit ratio of treatment with antidepressants in the light...