“The Lifetime Risk of Suicide in Alcoholism”, 1990-04-01 (; backlinks; similar):
Current estimates of the lifetime risk of suicide in alcoholism (11% to 15%) are shown statistically to be untenable. Examination of the mortality from suicide in all published follow-up studies of alcoholics containing the requisite data permits calculation of a much smaller lifetime suicide risk: about 2% in untreated and 2.21% in outpatient-treated probands. Studies of alcoholics identified from hospital admissions yield a lifetime risk of about 3.4% for the United States, the United Kingdom, and other English-speaking countries. It is higher in the Scandinavian and European countries with high suicide rates, but not in those with low national suicide rates.
The population at risk is shown to be about half of that commonly estimated, and consists of seriously affected alcoholics. While the annual incidence of suicide in the United States is about 1.3% currently, only that quarter of the population identifiably psychiatrically ill is at substantial risk.
Despite the seemingly minuscule lifetime risk of 2% to 3.4%, the likelihood of suicide in conservatively diagnosed alcoholism is 60–120× that of the non-psychiatrically ill. Such alcoholism contributes about 25% of the suicides.
For further information on these topics, see articles on Suicide, Alcoholism, and Epidemiology of suicide.