Subway Train‐Related Fatalities in New York City: Accident versus Suicide* |
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Authors: | Peter T. Lin M.D. James R. Gill M.D. |
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Affiliation: | Office of Chief Medical Examiner, City of New York and Department of Forensic Medicine, New York University School of Medicine, New York, NY. |
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Abstract: | Abstract: We examined the characteristics of subway train‐related fatalities in New York City between Jan. 1, 2003 and May 31, 2007 in order to determine which factors are useful in differentiating accident from suicide. Subway train‐related deaths with homicide and undetermined manners also are included. During this period, there were 211 subway train‐related fatalities. The manners of death were: suicide (n = 111), accident (n = 76), undetermined (n = 20), and homicide (n = 4). The causes of death were blunt trauma (n = 206) and electrocution (n = 5). Torso transection and extremity amputation were more frequent in suicides. Antidepressant medications were more frequently detected in suicides, whereas cocaine and ethanol were more frequent in accidents. However, autopsy findings should be weighed in the context of the entire evaluation along with other circumstantial and investigative findings. In unwitnessed deaths where additional information is unavailable or discrepant, the most appropriate manner of death usually is undetermined. |
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Keywords: | forensic sciences forensic pathology accident suicide subway train fatality |
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