She wrot a latter before suside

                       She wrot a latter before suside

Suicide is the act of intentionally causing one's own death.[1] Risk factors include mental disorders such as depression, bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, personality disorders, alcoholism, or substance misuse.[2][3] Others are impulsive acts due to stress such as from financial difficulties, troubles with relationships, or from bullying.[3][4] Those who have previously attempted suicide are at higher risk for future attempts.[3] Suicide prevention efforts include limiting access to method of suicide, such as firearms and poisons, treating mental illness and substance misuse, proper media reporting of suicide, and improving economic conditions.[3] Although crisis hotlines are common, there is little evidence for their effectiveness.The most commonly used method of suicide varies between countries, and is partly related to the availability of effective means.[6] Common methods include hanging, pesticide poisoning, and firearms.[7] Suicide resulted in 842,000 deaths in 2013 up from 712,000 deaths in 1990.[8] This makes it the 10th leading cause of death worldwide.Rates of completed suicides are generally higher in men than in women, with males 3.5 times more likely to kill themselves in the developed world and 1.5 times more likely to kill themselves in the developing world than females.[10] Suicide generally is most common among those over the age of 70; however, in certain continues those age 15 to 30 are at highest risk.[10] There are an estimated 10 to 20 million non-fatal attempted suicides every year.[11] Non-fatal suicide attempts may lead to injury and long-term disabilities. In the Western world, attempts are more common in young people and females.

Views on suicide have been influenced by broad existential themes such as religion, honor, and the meaning of life.[13][14] The Abrahamic religions traditionally consider suicide an offense towards God due to the belief in the sanctity of life.[15] During the samurai era in Japan, a form of suicide known as seppuku was respected as a means of making up for failure or as a form of protest.[16] Sati, a practice outlawed by the British Raj, expected the Indian widow to kill herself on her husband's funeral fire, either willingly or under pressure from the family and society.[17] Suicide and attempted suicide, while previously illegal, are no longer in most Western countries.[18] It remains a criminal offense in many countries.[19] In the 20th and 21st centuries, suicide has been used on rare occasions as a form of protest, and kamikaze and suicide bombings have been used as a military or terrorist tactic.[20] The word is from the Latin suicidium, which means "the killing of oneself".Suicide, also known as completed suicide, is the "act of taking one's own life".[1] Attempted suicide or non-fatal suicidal behavior is self-injury with the desire to end one's life that does not result in death.[22] Assisted suicide is when one individual helps another bring about their own death indirectly via providing either advice or the means to the end.[23] This is in contrast to euthanasia, where another person takes a more active role in bringing about a person's death.[23] Suicidal ideation is thoughts of ending one's life but not taking any active efforts to do so.There is discussion about the appropriateness of the term "commit", and its use to describe suicide. Those who object to the use of commit argue that it carries with it implications that suicide is a criminal, sinful or morally wrong act.[24] There is growing consensus that it is more appropriate to use "completed suicide," "died by suicide" or simply "killed him/herself" to describe the act of suicide, and this is reflected in mental health organisations' media guidance.Despite these efforts, "committed suicide" and similar descriptions remain common in both scholarly research and journalism.

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