Classification of a suicide death
In New Zealand, a death is only classified as suicide by the coroner on completion of the coroner’s inquiry. In some cases, an inquest may be heard several years after the death, particularly if there are factors relating to the death that need to be investigated first (for example, a death in custody). Consequently, a provisional suicide classification may be made before the coroner reaches a verdict.
High level suicide information for 2013 (ahead of the Suicide Facts 2013 publication) is available at Suicide Facts: 2013 data. This data shows that in 2013, 508 people in New Zealand died by suicide – a rate of 11.0 deaths per 100,000 population.
Comparing New Zealand sources of data on suicide
In addition to the Ministry’s official statistics on suicide, each year the Chief Coroner releases provisional data on suspected self-inflicted deaths notified to the Coroner.
The following table outlines the key differences between the Ministry’s official statistical publication Suicide Facts and the Chief Coroner’s provisional data.
Suicide Facts (Ministry of Health) | Provisional suicide data (Coronial Services) |
---|---|
Annually by calendar year | Annually from July to June |
Deaths which have been determined by a Coroner to be a suicide (including only a few provisional cases still to be determined) | Provisional count of all self-inflicted deaths referred into the coronial system, including active cases before a Coroner where intent is yet to be established by a Coroner |
Subject to minor revisions as the few remaining provisional cases are finalised | Subject to significant revision as coronial determinations are completed |
For the above reasons, data is published approximately 2 to 3 years after the annual period of interest. | For the above reasons, data is published 2 months after the annual period of interest |