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Journal Article

Citation

Khan S, Quazi S, Singh BR, Tirpude BH, Mohite P. Indian J. Forensic Med. Toxicol. 2020; 14(4): 6364-6368.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2020, All-India Institute of Medical Sciences. Deptartment of Forensic Medicine)

DOI

10.37506/ijfmt.v14i4.12599

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

The increase crime rates with stress in the day to day life is responsible for vide range of medico legal autopsies in the society. The violent asphyxial deaths are responsible for the large number of medicolegal autopsies out of which hanging is a very common in society. Hanging is the cheapest and painless form of self-destruction. It has been employed as the method of suicide since time immortal. The study under consideration is a cross sectional study which was carried on the dead bodies of either sex. The deceased were brought for medico legal autopsy with the history probably revealing the cause of death due to hanging in the autopsy room at a medical college in Central India from 1st August 2011 to 31st July 2017. The number of hanging cases during the study period were 101,the majority of victims 66 (65.34%) belong to the nuclear family while the 31 (30.69%) cases belong to the joint family. The family status of 4 (3.96%) cases cannot be ascertained as the bodies were unidentified. The majority of victims 70 (69.30%) cases, preferred indoor place for hanging while about 31 (30.69%) cases preferred outdoor place for hanging. Considering their educational status about 24.75% cases had educated upto primary school, 10.89% had upto secondary school, 24.75% upto higher secondary, 22.77% upto graduate or more and 11.88% were uneducated. Also in 4.95% cases, the educational status was unknown. © 2020, Institute of Medico-Legal Publications. All rights reserved.


Language: en

Keywords

adult; human; suicide; Hanging; female; male; India; autopsy; head injury; sex difference; hanging; major clinical study; victim; retrospective study; marriage; photography; mental stress; economic aspect; prospective study; educational status; nuclear family; Article; observational study; Educational status; family assessment; mortality rate; Indoor; Nuclear family

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