Intentional Injuries in Europe & Central Asia
How Intentional Injuries affects 58 countries in Europe & Central Asia.
| # | Country | Share (%) |
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Self-harm and suicide claim over 700,000 lives each year, making suicide the fourth leading cause of death among 15-29 year-olds globally. For every completed suicide, there are an estimated 20 or more attempts. The highest suicide rates are found in Eastern Europe, Central Asia, sub-Saharan Africa, and parts of East Asia, though underreporting is substantial in many countries due to stigma and legal prohibitions. Risk factors include mental health disorders (depression, substance use, psychosis), prior self-harm, chronic pain, social isolation, economic adversity, and access to lethal means. Pesticide self-poisoning is a leading method in rural agricultural communities in Asia and Africa, while firearm suicide predominates in the United States. Gender patterns vary: men die by suicide at higher rates in most countries, while women have higher rates of non-fatal self-harm. Indigenous populations, LGBTQ+ youth, refugees, and prisoners face elevated risk. Suicide is preventable, yet mental health services remain severely underfunded globally. Europe and Central Asia benefit from relatively strong health systems and high physician density, but face ageing populations, rising non-communicable disease burdens, and persistent East-West health outcome gradients. In Europe & Central Asia, intentional injuries mortality is near global averages, though the region exhibits a marked gradient between Western European countries with low rates and Central Asian nations facing higher burdens.
Restricting access to means — pesticide bans, firearm regulations, barrier installations at jump sites, medication packaging limits — is the most effective suicide prevention strategy. Responsible media reporting guidelines reduce contagion effects. School-based programmes, gatekeeper training for community members, and crisis helplines extend reach. Treatment of depression and substance use disorders, follow-up after suicide attempts, and integration of mental health into primary care are essential clinical interventions. The WHO LIVE LIFE implementation guide provides a comprehensive framework.
The mortality estimates presented on this page are derived from the Global Burden of Disease (GBD) study, produced by the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME). The GBD synthesizes data from vital registration systems, verbal autopsies, cancer registries, and surveillance networks across more than 200 countries and territories. Death rates are expressed per 100,000 population and are age-standardized, which adjusts for differences in age structure between populations so that comparisons across countries and over time reflect genuine differences in mortality risk rather than demographic composition.
The dataset typically covers the period from 1990 to 2023, although availability varies by country and cause. When interpreting the figures for intentional injuries in Europe & Central Asia, note that higher age-standardized rates indicate a greater mortality burden independent of whether a country's population is older or younger. Trends over time reveal whether public health interventions, economic development, and health system improvements have reduced or increased the toll of this condition in the region.
The cause-of-death categories used on this page follow the Global Burden of Disease cause hierarchy, a standardized classification that groups individual ICD-coded causes into clinically meaningful categories. The "share of deaths" metric shows what percentage of all deaths in a given country or region are attributed to intentional injuries. A rising share does not necessarily mean more people are dying from this cause — it may reflect success in reducing competing causes of death. Always examine both absolute rates and shares for a complete picture of mortality patterns in Europe & Central Asia.