Adolescents most likely to have self-inflicted wounds

ATLANTA (AP) --Adolescents show up at hospital emergency rooms with 
self-inflicted injuries -- usually suicide attempts -- more often than any 
other age group, the government said Thursday.

A study by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that 
hospitals in the United States treated 264,108 non-fatal, self-inflicted 
wounds in 2000. The study did not include fatal wounds.

It found one self-inflicted injury for every 389 people ages 15 to 19 in 
2000. People ages 20 to 24 had the next highest frequency, with one injury 
for every 423 people.

It also found that women are nearly 30 percent more likely than men to 
arrive at a hospital with a self-inflicted wound.

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.

"Some people, when you ask them about their intent, their intent was they 
really wanted to die," said the CDC's Dr. Alex Crosby. "Others are just 
looking for a way to deal with their problem."

For all age groups, roughly 60 percent of all self-inflicted wounds are 
probable suicide attempts, the study found. The CDC estimates about 29,000 
people commit suicide every year in the United States.

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 1 percent.

Copyright 2002 The Associated Press.

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