Suicide And Suicide PreventionIntroduction: Suicide
is a huge social and emotional burden. We have to distinguish between suicide
gesture, suicide attempt and completed suicide. Suicide statistics, suicide
rates: In the U.S. about 200,000 people attempt suicide every year, in
one day that translates into 75 persons per day who attempt suicide. About
10% succeed(completed suicide). The attempted suicides account for about 20% of
all emergency hospital admissions and 65% of those are less than 40 years old.
Women are attempting suicide 2 or 3 times more often than men, but men complete
it more often. Among the completed suicides more than 70% are older than 40 years.
The incidence of older men who kill themselves successfully is even higher above
60 than at age 40. Practicing members of religious groups and married couples
have a much lower suicide rate than single or divorced people. Suicide notes are
often left (by about 1 in 6 who complete suicide) which summarize the reasons
of why they have done it. Any person who attempted suicide unsuccessfully, but
left a suicide note nearby should be treated as an inpatient in a psychiatric
ward and a psychiatrist should be give the note. Working though all of the points
raised by the suicidal, depressed person is an important part of the therapy for
depression. Causes
of Suicide:
Many
people wonder why a fellow human could attempt or even complete such a self destructive
act. There is usually a string of negative events in that person's life, which
leads to the final desperate move of committing suicide. It can happen
in a person with a risk taking personality trait displaying self destructive behavior
such as alcoholism, violent behavior, reckless driving and self-mutilation. Behind
such a personality is often a broken home, in which the person grew up.
Traumatic childhood experiences such as growing up with an alcoholic parent and
witnessing and experiencing abuse has been shown to lead to self-destructive behavior
in the offspring. Often this behavior leads to isolation and depression. Among
the major symptoms of depression are suicidal thoughts and behavior. More than
50% of attempted suicide cases are due to inadequately treated depression. Depression
may have been triggered by social situations such as broken up relationships,
divorce, loss of a close person. It might be due to major financial crises such
as bankruptcy or business failure. It may be because of personal injury such as
after a car accident, an illness like cancer or a disabling disease like multiple
sclerosis or Parkinson disease. Particularly among the elderly up to 20% of suicides
are due to debilitating disease that the person cannot tolerate emotionally. Treatment
and Suicide Prevention: With proper diagnosis of depression,
empathy from the treating physician and proper treatment many, if not all of these
cases could be prevented from killing themselves. The key, however, is early diagnosis,
treatment with antidepressants, supportive counseling and the support from self
help groups. Psychiatrists often point out to family physicians at continuing
education events how important it is to frankly ask the patient in a high risk
setting how they are coping emotionally and then to also ask directly whether
they have recently been thinking about "ending it all". Often suicidal
patients will open up and talk about all the negative feelings they have been
bottling up. With supportive counseling at this stage and some antidepressant
medication many patients can be adequately treated as outpatients. On the other
hand, if further interviewing reveals that the patient is at a high suicidal risk,
the patient can be hospitalized with close psychiatric nursing supervision until
he/she is over the critical period. With an increased awareness of high risk settings
the public at large can help as they spot problem cases and talk to the affected
person and attempt to influence them to seek psychiatric advice or at least see
their physician as a first step.
Maybe
not all cases can be prevented, but a higher than 50% of the cases that kill themselves
presently could have been helped. We as the public need to overcome the stigma
that we often still attach to mental disease. Mental disease is treatable. We
have to remember that somewhere in the future when we get ill with a disabling
disease it may be us who could be on the receiving end. Other links regarding
depression: 1. More info on suicide: Suicide
Crisis Center 2. Here is a Canadian site on Suicide
Prevention. |