Informações Adicionais

Campo Valor
Dados atualizados pela última vez 3 de março de 2026
Metadados atualizados pela última vez 3 de março de 2026
Criado 3 de março de 2026
Formato CSV
Licença Open Data Commons Attribution License
Data extraction pagehttps://www.ncrb.gov.in/accidental-deaths-suicides-in-india-table-content.html
Data insightsThe Mass/Family Suicides dataset offers a rare and deeply significant window into the social and emotional crises that lead to collective acts of suicide within families or close groups in India. By examining the number of such cases disaggregated by marital status (Married and Unmarried), the dataset allows researchers to explore how family structure, relationship dynamics, and social pressures contribute to extreme distress culminating in shared suicide events. Analysis of this data can reveal whether married individuals are more frequently involved in mass suicides, potentially reflecting family or financial stress or whether unmarried individuals face distinct psychological or social triggers. Temporal and regional patterns may highlight states or periods where collective suicides increase, possibly in connection with economic hardship, social isolation, or cultural pressures.
Data last updated30-09-2025
Data retreival date27-10-2025
Datastore activeFalse
District no0
FrequencyYearly
Gp no0
GranularityState
Has viewsTrue
Id4b8289cb-9f81-4198-9f75-9e7a0b62b69b
Idp readyFalse
MethodologyThe National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB) compiles profession-wise suicide statistics annually based on information gathered during police investigations, autopsy reports, and inputs recorded by state crime records bureaus. When a suicide case is registered, investigating officers classify the deceased’s occupation or livelihood at the time of death into predefined categories such as farmers, daily wage earners, students, professionals, or unemployed individuals. These occupational details are typically reported by family members, witnesses, or through available identification records. State-level data are consolidated and published in the Accidental Deaths and Suicides in India (ADSI) report, with suicide rates calculated using relevant occupational population estimates where available.
Mimetypetext/csv
No indicators3
Package id91480cbe-d1c9-4e2a-8362-27b73dee55f9
Position6
Size7,4 KiB
Skuncrb-adsi_mass_or_family_suicides-st-yr-aaa
Stateactive
States uts no36
Tehsil no0
Url typeupload
Village no0
Years covered2018 - 2022
Methodology The National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB) compiles profession-wise suicide statistics annually based on information gathered during police investigations, autopsy reports, and inputs recorded by state crime records bureaus. When a suicide case is registered, investigating officers classify the deceased’s occupation or livelihood at the time of death into predefined categories such as farmers, daily wage earners, students, professionals, or unemployed individuals. These occupational details are typically reported by family members, witnesses, or through available identification records. State-level data are consolidated and published in the Accidental Deaths and Suicides in India (ADSI) report, with suicide rates calculated using relevant occupational population estimates where available.
Indicators
Similar Resources
Granularity Level State
Data Extraction Page https://www.ncrb.gov.in/accidental-deaths-suicides-in-india-table-content.html
Data Retreival Date 27-10-2025
Data Last Updated 30-09-2025
Sku ncrb-adsi_mass_or_family_suicides-st-yr-aaa
Dataset Frequency Yearly
Years Covered 2018 - 2022
No of States/UT(s) 36
No of Districts 0
No of Tehsils/blocks 0
No of Gram Panchayats 0
Informações Adicionais
Number of Indicators 3
Insights from the dataset The Mass/Family Suicides dataset offers a rare and deeply significant window into the social and emotional crises that lead to collective acts of suicide within families or close groups in India. By examining the number of such cases disaggregated by marital status (Married and Unmarried), the dataset allows researchers to explore how family structure, relationship dynamics, and social pressures contribute to extreme distress culminating in shared suicide events. Analysis of this data can reveal whether married individuals are more frequently involved in mass suicides, potentially reflecting family or financial stress or whether unmarried individuals face distinct psychological or social triggers. Temporal and regional patterns may highlight states or periods where collective suicides increase, possibly in connection with economic hardship, social isolation, or cultural pressures.
IDP Ready No
LGD Mapping
Mapping Status %
Geo Columns