War and suicidal deaths by explosives in southwestern Croatia

Archives of Medical Research
Alan BosnarNunzio di Nunno

Abstract

A total of 853 suicides, from which 29 were committed by explosives, were recorded in the examined region during three distinctly specific intervals-peace time (1986-1990), wartime (1991-1995), and the postwar time (1996-2000). Suicides caused by explosives, without a terrorist background, from 1986-2000 were reviewed. Out of 29 suicides by explosives committed in the examined period, the age and sex of suicide victims and alcohol intoxication at the time of suicide were analyzed. In the prewar period no suicides by explosives were recorded, in distinction from wartime and the postwar period when 20 and 9 such suicides were recorded, respectively. Alcohol testing was performed in 76% of the cases, showing the highest alcohol concentration in suicides' blood in wartime with an average value of 1.58 g/kg of absolute alcohol. As to the suicides' sex, 93% of the victims were male and 7% female. The paper emphasizes the drastically increased number of suicides committed by explosives in wartime.

References

Jan 1, 1992·International Journal of Legal Medicine·M Varga, G Csabai
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Jan 1, 1995·Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica·D J Somasundaram, S Rajadurai
May 29, 2002·Archives of Medical Research·Alan BosnarSanja Stifter
Feb 27, 2003·The American Journal of Forensic Medicine and Pathology·M TsokosJ Barz
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Aug 25, 2004·Archives of Medical Research·Alan BosnarMiran Coklo

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Citations

Feb 12, 2011·Conflict and Health·Nadine EzardMark van Ommeren
May 19, 2009·Medical Hypotheses·Miran CokloAlan Bosnar
Oct 2, 2009·Suicide & Life-threatening Behavior·Tal WeizmanShaul Schreiber
May 10, 2017·International Journal of Legal Medicine·J ZwirnerB Ondruschka
Jul 2, 2021·Forensic Science, Medicine, and Pathology·Nicola GalanteUmberto Genovese

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