Department of Forensic Sciences, Oslo University Hospital, Box 4950 Nydalen, N-0424, Oslo, Norway.
Department of Behavioural Sciences in Medicine, Institute of Basic Medical Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, University of Oslo, Box 1111 Blindern, N-0317, Oslo, Norway.
BMC Psychiatry. 2019 Jan 18;19(1):33. doi: 10.1186/s12888-019-2015-9.
The extent of post-mortem detection of specific psychoactive drugs may differ between countries, and may greatly influence the national death register's classification of manner and cause of death. The main objective of the present study was to analyse the magnitude and pattern of post-mortem detection of various psychoactive substances by the manner of death (suicide, accidental, undetermined and natural death with a psychiatric diagnosis) in Norway and Sweden.
The Cause of Death Registers in Norway and Sweden provided data on 600 deaths in 2008 from each country, of which 200 were registered as suicides, 200 as accidents or undetermined manner of death and 200 as natural deaths in individuals with a diagnosis of mental disorder as the underlying cause of death. We examined death certificates and forensic reports including toxicological analyses.
The detection of psychoactive substances was commonly reported in suicides (66 and 74% in Norway and Sweden respectively), accidents (85 and 66%), undetermined manner of deaths (80% in the Swedish dataset) and in natural deaths with a psychiatric diagnosis (50 and 53%). Ethanol was the most commonly reported substance in the three manners of death, except from opioids being more common in accidental deaths in the Norwegian dataset. In cases of suicide by poisoning, benzodiazepines and z-drugs were the most common substances in both countries. Heroin or morphine was the most commonly reported substance in cases of accidental death by poisoning in the Norwegian dataset, while other opioids dominated the Swedish dataset. Anti-depressants were found in 22% of the suicide cases in the Norwegian dataset and in 29% of suicide cases in the Swedish dataset.
Psychoactive substances were detected in 66 and 74% of suicides and in 85 and 66% of accidental deaths in the Norwegian and Swedish datasets, respectively. Apart from a higher detection rate of heroin in deaths by accident in Norway than in Sweden, the pattern of detected psychoactive substances was similar in the two countries. Assessment of a suicidal motive may be hampered by the common use of psychoactive substances in suicide victims.
特定精神活性药物死后检测的范围在不同国家之间可能存在差异,并可能极大地影响国家死亡登记处对死亡方式和死因的分类。本研究的主要目的是分析 2008 年挪威和瑞典按照死亡方式(自杀、意外、原因不明和有精神疾病诊断的自然死亡)分类的各种精神活性物质死后检测的程度和模式。
挪威和瑞典的死因登记处提供了来自每个国家的 600 例死亡数据,其中 200 例被登记为自杀,200 例为意外或原因不明的死亡方式,200 例为有精神障碍作为根本死因的自然死亡。我们检查了死亡证明和包括毒理学分析在内的法医报告。
精神活性物质的检测在自杀者中普遍报告(挪威和瑞典分别为 66%和 74%)、意外(85%和 66%)、原因不明的死亡方式(瑞典数据集为 80%)和有精神疾病诊断的自然死亡(挪威和瑞典分别为 50%和 53%)。乙醇是这三种死亡方式中最常报告的物质,除了在挪威数据集的意外死亡中阿片类药物更为常见。在自杀性中毒的情况下,苯二氮卓类和 Z 类药物是两个国家最常见的物质。在挪威数据集的中毒性意外死亡中,海洛因或吗啡是最常报告的物质,而其他阿片类药物则主导了瑞典数据集。在挪威数据集的自杀案例中,发现了 22%的抗抑郁药,在瑞典数据集的自杀案例中,发现了 29%的抗抑郁药。
在挪威和瑞典的数据集分别有 66%和 74%的自杀和 85%和 66%的意外死亡中检测到精神活性物质。除了在挪威意外死亡中毒物检测中发现海洛因的比例高于瑞典之外,两国检测到的精神活性物质模式相似。对自杀动机的评估可能会因自杀者中普遍使用精神活性物质而受到阻碍。