User requirements for official suicide statistics
Feedback updated 3 Oct 2025
We asked
The Office for National Statistics (ONS) is reviewing how it presents its annual suicide statistics to improve clarity and usefulness for users.
Currently, data is based on the year the suicide was registered, not when it occurred, which can cause confusion due to registration delays. In 2024, only 38.7% of suicides registered occurred that same year. To address this, ONS ran a user feedback survey in April 2025, proposing three options for the annual release:
Option 1: Registrations-First:
- Continued focus on registration data but with further clarification of registration delays and improved signposting to near real-time surveillance data (nRTSSS).
Option 2: Combined Approach:
- Present both registration and occurrence data equally, with commentary. Offers fuller insight but may confuse users.
Option 3: Occurrences-First:
- Focus on occurrence data. More intuitive but less timely and requires revisions.
The user feedback survey aimed to gather user preferences and suggestions for improving the annual release.
You said
We received 93 responses to the user feedback survey, with 49% favouring the combined approach to presenting suicide statistics. Respondents included users from government bodies, mental health organisations, charities, businesses, and individuals.
We have broken down the number of responses we received by sector.
Sector |
Number of respondents |
Arm’s length body and other public sector |
12 |
Central Government and Devolved Nations |
6 |
Local Government |
28 |
Academia and research |
9 |
Charity and voluntary organisation |
12 |
Mental Health organisation |
1 |
Members of the public and support groups for affected communities |
3 |
Business and industry with an interest in employee mental health |
2 |
Citizen |
1 |
Not Answered |
19 |
Feedback strongly supported retaining registration data whilst also incorporating occurrence data. Four key themes emerged:
- User understanding: Users want suicide data to be clear and intuitive. Occurrence data helps identify trends, while registration data offers consistency. Both should be presented with narrative commentary and visual explanations to avoid confusion.
- Accuracy: Registration data is complete and reliable for long-term analysis. Occurrence data better reflects real-time trends and supports suicide prevention. Users value access to both for a fuller picture.
- Continuity and Comparability: Registration data ensures consistency with past releases and other official statistics across the UK. Occurrence data improves comparability with sources like nRTSSS. A combined approach balances both.
- Timeliness: Registration data is published around 8 months after year-end, while occurrence data lags by 18-24 months. Users appreciate nRTSSS for near real-time insights and support signposting to it.
Respondents viewed the combined approach as the most balanced, offering clarity, transparency, and contextual depth. It supports trend identification and targeted suicide prevention interventions.
Respondents also shared feedback on what ONS should consider when implementing the improvements:
- equal prominence for both registration and occurrence data
- clear commentary and caveats for both data types
- guidance on appropriate use
- visual and narrative analysis
- modelling to estimate unregistered suicides
We did
Following the feedback received through this engagement exercise, ONS have improved the way we present our suicide statistics in the annual release. The improvements include:
- presenting both registration and occurrence data within dedicated sections, with clear commentary
- the main points now include key figures and trends from the occurrence data
- caveats for each data type are clearly explained to aid interpretation
- a visualisation illustrating how registration delays have changed over time
- signposting to the nRTSSS data helps users access more timely regional insights
- exploring nowcasting techniques to adjust occurrence figures for unregistered suicides, aiming to improve timeliness. We aim to implement this in the 2025 release (due Autumn 2026)
This approach provides a more balanced and comprehensive view of suicide trends and supports clearer interpretation.
We would like to thank everyone who took part in this user engagement activity. The valuable feedback received has guided improvements to our annual release, and we continue to welcome user feedback.
Please see the full article, User engagement with suicide statistics: registration and occurrence data, for further information.
Overview
The Office for National Statistics (ONS) is exploring ways to improve our annual suicide statistics to ensure clarity for all our users.
Below, we summarise the context around the need for improvement and propose three options. When responding to the questionnaire, please provide your favoured option with a justification detailing how this would meet your needs. The details of these options are also in the user questionnaire.
In England and Wales, all deaths by suicide are certified by a coroner and cannot be registered until an inquest is complete. This results in a delay between the date the suicide occurred and the date it is registered and received by the ONS. Currently, ONS suicide releases are published on a registration basis, that is the year in which the suicide was registered, and occurrence data is published in a separate dataset. Registration data relates to the previous year and the occurrence data has a lag of an additional year. For example, in August 2024 we published 2023 suicide registrations and 2022 suicide occurrences.
The below chart shows the percentage of suicides registered in a given year by the year in which the suicide occurred. This shows that due to lengthening registration delays, a smaller proportion of suicides registered in a given year are occurring within the same year. Only 39% of suicides registered in 2023 had a date of death that was also in 2023. This is substantially lower than in 2002 when 67% of suicides registered in 2002 also occurred in 2002.
Percentage of suicide registrations by year of occurrence, England and Wales, 2002 to 2023.
- Blue bars show suicides that occurred in the same year as the registration year
- Orange bars show suicides that occurred in the year before the registration year
- Green bars show suicides that occurred 2 or more years before the registration year
Due to this increase in registration delays, the ONS is considering how best to present suicide registration and occurrence data in our annual suicides release.
Proposed options
Option 1
Continue to publish the annual suicides statistics with all the commentary related to suicides registration data and occurrence data only appearing in a separate dataset, but with clearer commentary on the impact registration delays have on the annual figures. More signposting to the near to real-time suspected suicide surveillance (nRTSSS) data for England and Wales could also be provided.
Option 2
Continue to focus the annual suicides statistics on registration data but also include commentary on the most recent occurrence data received. This would provide a more complete picture of trends in suicides, but switching between registrations and occurrences could be confusing for users. We will consider the best way to present the registration and occurrence data to reduce confusion.
Option 3
Instead of the current approach of providing the registration data only in our annual bulletin, the bulletin would be based on the occurrence data only. This would be more intuitive for users as it would give them annual figures for suicides that occur in a given year. However, due to the registration delays, there would be a longer time lag of approximately 18 months to two years to publish this data. For example, the release in August 2025 would provide suicide occurrence data for 2023, instead of registration data for 2024. In addition, the annual occurrence figures would never be complete and would have to be repeatedly revised as new registrations for suicides are received, making year-on-year comparisons more difficult.
With this option, we will also consider whether it is possible to adjust occurrence figures for suicides that have not yet been registered at a given point in time. This would enable more timely suicide occurrence figures to be produced.
Why your views matter
Changing how we report our suicide statistics could affect the interpretability, timeliness, completeness and coherence of those statistics. We are seeking views from users of suicide statistics in, but not limited to, the following sectors, organisations and professions.
- Academia and researchers
- Central government departments
- Devolved nations
- Charity sector
- Coroners and courts conducting inquests
- Healthcare providers
- Local authorities and health and care boards
- Industries and employers with an interest in employee mental health
- Members of the public and support groups for affected communities
- Mental health organisations
- Universities and student unions
- Workplace wellbeing organisations
We want to hear your views so that we can consider what is best for our users. Your time completing this questionnaire would be greatly appreciated.
This user questionnaire is part of our wider plan to improve how we communicate all mortality statistics, and we will use feedback provided here to inform any changes to the communication of other ONS mortality related outputs, for example ONS statistics on drug poisoning deaths.
What happens after the questionnaire closes
Your answers will be stored confidentially by the ONS. They will be used to improve future annual suicide bulletins and potentially other mortality statistics. Individual responses will not be shared in full outside of the ONS, and names of individuals and organisations will not be linked to any feedback you provide.
We will publish an anonymised summary of the responses received, and will use your feedback to decide which of the three proposed options will be implemented. Each proposed option may have different timescales for when it can be delivered. We will provide further detail on timescales for the proposed option in the published summary. We may also undertake follow-up discussions with some users to help implement the proposed option.
If you have questions about this user survey, please email health.data@ons.gov.uk.
An accessible Word version of this questionnaire is also available. Please send completed responses to health.data@ons.gov.uk.
If you need support
If you are struggling to cope, please call Samaritans for free on 116 123 (UK and the Republic of Ireland) or contact other sources of support, such as those listed on the NHS Help for suicidal thoughts web page. Support is available 24 hours a day, every day of the year, providing a safe place for you, whoever you are and however you are feeling.
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Interests
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