ONTD Political

Surgeon general urges new focus on suicide prevention

6:18 pm - 09/10/2012
By Kim Painter, Special for USA TODAY

Facts about suicide in U.S.

• More than 36,000 people kill themselves each year.
• More than 374,000 people are treated in emergency rooms for self-inflicted injuries each
year.
• Suicide is the 10th-leading cause of death and twice as common as homicide.
• Men die by suicide four times as often as women and represent 78.8% of suicides.
• Women attempt suicide two to three times as often as men.
• Suicide rates for men are highest among those ages 75 and older.
• Suicide rates for women are highest among those ages 45-54.
• Firearms are the most commonly used method of suicide among men.
• Poisoning is the most common method of suicide for women.

Source: Suicide Prevention Resource Center

Many of the 36,000 annual deaths from suicide in the United States could be prevented by making suicide prevention a part of routine health care and getting people to talk frankly about suicide in homes, schools, workplaces, the military and even on Facebook, says an updated national strategy from the surgeon general and a coalition of public and private groups.

"Preventing suicide is everyone's business," Surgeon General Regina Benjamin said at a news conference Monday introducing the plan. It updates one introduced in 2001.



Since then, the nation has made progress in understanding suicide and launched some efforts, including the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline and a special crisis line for veterans (both available 24 hours a day at 800-273-8255), Benjamin says. But deaths have actually risen after falling in the 1990s, says Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius.

"We see especially alarming trends in our armed forces," she says, noting that in July, the Army lost 38 soldiers to suicide, an all-time one-month high. "These deaths are especially heartbreaking because we know they are preventable."

The goal of the new plan: saving 20,000 lives in the next five years.

The plan comes with some money: $55 million in federal grants to state, tribal and community prevention efforts.

Officials pointed to other recent actions by the federal government that might help: Medicare has started covering screening for depression, and under new incentives announced in August, physicians will be rewarded by Medicare and Medicaid for screening depressed patients for suicide risk. Meanwhile, President Obama just signed an executive order hiring 1,600 new mental-health workers in the Department of Veterans Affairs and increasing the workforce of the veterans' crisis line from 200 to 300.

But the plan calls on businesses, community groups, friends and families to do much of the work of suicide prevention — especially learning the signs that someone might be in trouble and learning what to do.

Among the possible signs, according to the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline:

• Talking about wanting to die or kill oneself.
• Looking for ways to do it, such as buying a gun.
• Talking about feeling hopeless or having no reason to live.

"Don't be afraid to ask, 'Are you thinking about killing yourself or harming yourself?' " Benjamin says. "If you see these warning signs, don't leave the person alone, remove any objects that can be used and call the national prevention line. … And if all of those fail, take them to the emergency room."

If the new plan is fully implemented, it could reduce the suicide rate, says Alan Berman, executive director of the American Association of Suicidology. "It's too early to predict if this plan will be more effective than its initial version," he said in an e-mail. "But this plan brings many more players to the task."

One of those players is Facebook, which started a program in December that lets users report suicidal posts and connects distressed users with online counselors.

Cheryl Sharp, 54, of Annapolis, Md., says she wishes that had been available when she was a teen: She attempted suicide nine times between ages 13 and 24 while suffering a "very dark depression." Eventually, she found a good therapist and other support, but, she says, for years "I wanted to talk to someone, I wanted to have an outlet, but it was such a taboo topic."

If Facebook had existed, "when I was 13, that is where I would have been," says Sharp, a social worker at the National Council for Community Behavioral Healthcare in Washington.
"Having Facebook and other social media involved does create a new opportunity," though the impact has not yet been studied, says Ken Duckworth, medical director of the National Alliance on Mental Illness.

High-profile anti-suicide efforts by the military also could have a "profound" effect throughout society, he says. "When they are saying that this is OK to talk about, it's a powerful statement."

Ninety percent of people who die by suicide have a mental illness, he says, and many are afraid to seek help. "Sometimes people fear they will lose their jobs or be viewed differently if they acknowledge these problems."


SOURCE: http://www.usatoday.com/news/health/story/2012-09-11/suicide-prevention/57731002/1
jaeji 11th-Sep-2012 04:43 am (UTC)
agreed on most terms. although i've seen and heard so many people complain about their facebook/twitter/(whatever other social networks) friends writing "emotional" messages for attention, i honestly do much rather they be vocal about their depression and it's sad that others choose to ignore these possible signs when it's right in their face as a means of "not feeding the troll". of course there are cases where people can be "overdramatic" about it, but still, it's always better to be safer than sorry. i also really dislike it whenever someone says "people who are really depressed usually stay quiet about it", because while it rang true for my own experience, it's just a different way of handling it... and not a very healthy one at that as well.

it's so sad to read about things like that, but i wish people are more willing to seek professional help for themselves or just talk to anyone, there are many out there who'd love to help. :(
thenakedcat TW - Attempted suicide11th-Sep-2012 06:53 pm (UTC)
One of my internet friends made a "goodbye world" post and then really did attempt to pull the trigger on herself. Thankfully, MANY people (including me) saw her post and called emergency services, so the local cops got there in time to pull the gun away from her. She's getting help now and doing a lot better but, holy shit, I am NOT ignoring any postings I see like that in the future. If someone is desperate enough to make THAT kind of plea for attention, I am willing to believe that they NEED the attention on some level.
_cheshire TW for depression/suicide11th-Sep-2012 05:05 am (UTC)
IA with all of this. There's such a stigma about mental illness, which does nothing helpful for people suffering from it. I would love for more people to receive factual information and resources on how to deal with mental illness---maybe more education would have stopped everyone from telling me "oh, just cheer up", or getting yelled at by my aunt while cuffed to a hospital bed the day after my suicide attempt because I was upsetting my mom by being ~sad~...

I also think it's absurd how few resources are out there--a few weeks after being released from a pysch hospital for my 2nd major episode of depression in a year I went to my campus counseling center because I needed services and was basically told I couldn't get any because I needed too much help. Reaaally helpful there, university.

I know this is probably a mess of a comment but this topic pisses me off because so little is being done about it.

Edited at 2012-09-11 05:06 am (UTC)
doverz TW: suicide11th-Sep-2012 05:28 am (UTC)
More awareness about mental illness would be awesome. About a year or so after my brother tried to commit suicide, our insurance decided they would stop paying for his medicine/therapy. Thankfully, his psychiatrist let my family pay sliding fee scales but he hasn't been in therapy for a few years now. He hasn't tried for a few years now, but he still does have suicidal thoughts and has said in the past it's not a matter of if but when.

And then of course working in residential treatment, I see a lot of suicidal ideation. There's this one girl right now who has more or less given up and could potentially be going to a foster home soon. It wouldn't surprise me if she ended up committing suicide which makes me really sad because she's an awesome girl.

So yeah, less stigma in regards to mental illness would be awesome as well as insurance companies realizing the importance of mental health and providing adequate coverage for mental illness and related issues.
lux_roark Re: TW: suicide11th-Sep-2012 10:03 am (UTC)
My insurance (I receive Medi-Cal because I get SSI benefits for my mental illness) keeps telling me they only cover 8 therapy sessions per-lifetime. It's just so ludicrous to me. I'm, thankfully, still able to see my psychiatrist, but medication doesn't fix everything.
miss_almost 11th-Sep-2012 04:35 pm (UTC)
a health news-y blog i follow posted a few things about suicide recently.

http://nnlm.gov/bhic/2012/09/07/world-suicide-prevention-day-september-10-2012/

http://nnlm.gov/bhic/2012/08/30/preventing-suicide-a-toolkit-for-high-schools/

both have toolkits for suicide prevention.
mirhanda 11th-Sep-2012 07:53 pm (UTC)
Weird that this should be posted on a day when depression is kicking my ass. I'm not suicidal today but I can certainly see where the urge comes from. We need more mental health resources in the country and actually need to stop dividing mental health from physical health. If mental health needs were covered the same as physical health we'd be much better off as a society.
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