Abstract
Aim: We investigated mortality from external causes in Swedish people who had been hospitalised with a severe mental disorder. Methods: Hospitalisations in people aged 15 years or older admitted to hospital with a main diagnosis of schizophrenia, bipolar mood disorder or unipolar mood disorder between 1987 and 2010 were linked to their causes of death. Results: The mortality rate from all external causes was 20-fold higher in those with unipolar mood disorder, 15-fold higher in those with bipolar disorder and 12-fold higher in those with schizophrenia than in the general population. Over the study periods, the mortality rate declined more for people with unipolar mood disorder (−35%) and schizophrenia (−29%) than the total population (−25%) and those with bipolar mood disorder (−15%). The suicide rate declined most for those with unipolar mood disorder and schizophrenia (−42% for both) and less for the general population (−37%) and those with bipolar mood disorder (−21%). For external causes other than suicide, the mortality rate declined in the general population (−17%) but increased in people with schizophrenia (14%), bipolar mood disorder (30%) and unipolar mood disorder (52%).
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