Ministry of Defence
Abbeywood North
Bristol
BS34 8JH
United Kingdom
Telephone: 03067 984423
Ref: FOI 2023/01191
E-mail:
Analysis-Health-PQ-
xxx@xxx.xxx.xx
Mr David Gee
request-943127-
17 February 2023
xxxxxxxx@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx.xxx
Dear Mr Gee,
Thank you for your email on 27 January 2023 requesting the following information:
“I'd like to make a follow-up request [to FOI2022/15063] for the same information for male
personnel only, as follows:
Can you please tell me what was the male suicide rate per 100,000 personnel in the 16-19
age group in the a) army, and b) armed forces in the period 1984-2021.”
I am treating your correspondence as a request for information under the Freedom of Information
Act 2000 (FOIA). A search for the information has now been completed within the Ministry of
Defence, and I can confirm that all the information in scope of your request is held.
a. In the period 1 January 1984 to 31 December 2021, the suicide rate of male UK regular Army
personnel aged 16-19 was 15.4 per 100,000 personnel.
b. In the period 1 January 1984 to 31 December 2021, the suicide rate of male UK regular Armed
Forces personnel aged 16-19 was 12.8 per 100,000 personnel.
Under section 16 of the Act (Advice and Assistance), you may find it useful to note the following:
MOD produce an annual
National Statistic on UK Armed Forces suicides. The ‘Figure 6 data’ tab
within the supplementary data tables of this statistic contains three-year moving average rates for
UK regular Armed Forces male suicides by age group.
Background Notes
Suicide Data
• Defence Statistics Health compiles the Department’s authoritative deaths database for all
UK Armed Forces personnel who died whilst in Service going back to 1984. Information is
compiled from several internal and external sources from which we release a number of
internal analyses and external National Statistics Notices. The information presented has
been compiled from data held by Defence Statistics on 03 February 2023.
• The information presented includes coroner-confirmed suicides and open verdict deaths in
line with the definition used by the Office for National Statistics (ONS) in the publication of
National Statistics. The National Statistics definition of suicide includes deaths given an
underlying cause of intentional self-harm or an injury/poisoning of undetermined intent. In
England and Wales, it has been customary to assume that most injuries and poisonings of
undetermined intent are cases where the harm was self-inflicted, but there was insufficient
evidence to prove that the deceased deliberately intended to kill themselves and thus given
an open or narrative verdict by the coroner.
• The information presented includes coroner-confirmed suicides only.
• Figures are for regular personnel and only those reservists who have died whilst on
operational deployment. Figures only include male personnel.
• Rates enable comparisons between groups and over time, taking account of the number of
personnel in a group (personnel at risk) at a point in time. The number of events (i.e.
deaths) is divided by the number of personnel at risk and multiplied by 100,000 to calculate
the rate.
Would you like to be added to our contact list, so that we can inform you about updates to statistics
and consult you if we are thinking of making changes? You can subscribe to updates by emailing
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx@xxx.xxx.xx. If you have any queries regarding the content of this letter, please contact this office in the first
instance.
If you wish to complain about the handling of your request, or the content of this response, you can
request an independent internal review by contacting the Information Rights Compliance team,
Ground Floor, MOD Main Building, Whitehall, SW1A 2HB (e-mail
xxxxxxxxxx@xxx.xxx.xx). Please
note that any request for an internal review should be made within 40 working days of the date of
this response.
If you remain dissatisfied following an internal review, you may raise your complaint directly to the
Information Commissioner under the provisions of Section 50 of the Freedom of Information Act.
Please note that the Information Commissioner will not normally investigate your case until the
MOD internal review process has been completed. The Information Commissioner can be
contacted at: Information Commissioner’s Office, Wycliffe House, Water Lane, Wilmslow,
Cheshire, SK9 5AF. Further details of the role and powers of the Information Commissioner can be
found on the
Commissioner's website. Yours sincerely
Defence Statistics Health (Analysis Directorate)