Decades of national suicide prevention policies haven't slowed the death
Decades of national suicide prevention policies havent slowed the death
Weve done a really good job at developing solutions for a part of the problem, but we really dont know enough, said Arlington, Va. mental health and suicide prevention advocate Pooja Mehta
BY: KFF HEALTH NEWS - SEPTEMBER 19, 2024 5:15 AM
If you or someone you know may be experiencing a mental health crisis, contact the 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline by dialing or texting 988.
By Cheryl Platzman Weinstock
When Pooja Mehtas younger brother, Raj, died by suicide at 19 in March 2020, she felt blindsided. Rajs last text message was to his college lab partner about how to divide homework questions. You dont say youre going to take questions 1 through 15 if youre planning to be dead one hour later, said Mehta, 29, a mental health and suicide prevention advocate in Arlington, Virginia. She had been trained in Mental Health First Aid a nationwide program that teaches how to identify, understand, and respond to signs of mental illness yet she said her brother showed no signs of trouble.
Mehta said some people blamed her for Rajs death because the two were living together during the covid-19 pandemic while Raj was attending classes online. Others said her training should have helped her recognize he was struggling.
But, Mehta said, we act like we know everything there is to know about suicide prevention. Weve done a really good job at developing solutions for a part of the problem, but we really dont know enough.
Rajs death came in the midst of decades of unsuccessful attempts to tamp down suicide rates nationwide.
{snip}
KFF HEALTH NEWS
KFF Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at KFF an independent source of health policy research, polling, and journalism.
bucolic_frolic
(46,973 posts)We talk too much about it. It becomes an option because people know about it.
People really want someone to soothe their pains and hurts, to make them believe someone cares enough about them to listen and help. We give them therapists who are paid for categorizing people's state of mind and for operating within the legal, moral, ethical, and legal parameters of their profession. Some enjoy the power, prestige, money. These things are not the same as caring about someone.
People need to be taught to think clearly, to monitor their own thoughts, to act decisively and feel empowered to improve their own lives.
I'm not a mental health professional. Obviously.
Danascot
(4,895 posts)that there are more potential suicides than in the past due to stress or depression or other causes but national suicide prevention policies may be working to tamp down potential suicides so they don't become actual suicides, so the rate of actual suicides appears to remain more level.
Just a thought.