Jakarta Globe – AFP, Sep 04, 2014
Geneva. One person commits suicide every 40 seconds — more than all the yearly victims of wars and natural disaster — with the highest toll among the elderly, the United Nations said on Thursday.
Geneva. One person commits suicide every 40 seconds — more than all the yearly victims of wars and natural disaster — with the highest toll among the elderly, the United Nations said on Thursday.
In its
first report on suicide, the UN’s World Health Organization blamed intense
media coverage when celebrities kill themselves for fueling the problem.
“Suicide is
an amazing public health problem. There is one suicide every 40 seconds — it is
a huge number,” said Shekhar Saxena, director of WHO’s mental health
department, at the presentation of the report in Geneva.
“Suicide
kills more than conflicts, wars and natural catastrophes,” she said. “There are
1.5 million violent deaths every year in the world, of which 800,000 are
suicides.”
Some of the
highest rates of suicide are found in central and eastern Europe and in Asia,
with 25 percent occurring in rich countries, the report says.
Men are
almost twice as likely as women to take their own lives. Common methods are
hanging, gunshots, and especially in rural areas the use of poisonous
insecticides.
“Globally,
suicide rates are highest in people aged 70 years and over. In some countries,
however, the highest rates are found among the young,” WHO said. “Notably,
suicide is the second leading cause of death in 15-29 year-olds globally.”
Don’t
glamorize suicide
Alexandra
Fleischmann, one of the report’s co-authors, said part of the blame lies with
the publicity given to suicides by famous people, such as Hollywood actor Robin
Williams.
The
Oscar-winning star, who had suffered from depression, was found dead at his
home on August 1, prompting an outpouring of emotion from the public and
widespread media coverage.
Ella
Arensman, president of the International Association for Suicide Prevention,
said that after news broke of Williams’ death she received “five emails of
people who had recovered [from a] suicide crisis and saying that they are
thinking again about suicide.”
“These
overwhelming reports can have a contagion effect on vulnerable people,” she
said, referring also to the “sharp increase” in suicides after German football
player Robert Enke killed himself in 2009.
“Suicide
should not be glamorized or sensationalized,” Fleischmann said, urging news
outlets not to mention suicide as the cause of death at the start of reports,
but only at the end, “with a mention of where [the reader] can find help.”
WHO, which
called suicide a major public health problem that must be confronted and
stemmed, studied 172 countries to produce the report, which took a decade to
research.
It said
that in 2012 high-income countries had a slightly higher suicide rate — 12.7
per 100,000 people, versus 11.2 in low- and middle-income nations.
But given
the latter category’s far higher population, they accounted for three-quarters
of the global total.
Southeast
Asia, including North Korea, India, Indonesia and Nepal, made up over a third
of the annual figure.
WHO
cautioned that suicide figures are often incomplete, with many countries
failing to keep proper tallies.
In
addition, “there are many suicide attempts for each death,” WHO chief Margaret
Chan said.
“The impact
on families, friends and communities is devastating and far-reaching, even long
after persons dear to them have taken their own lives,” she added.
Suicide and
attempted suicide are considered a crime in 25 countries, mostly in Africa, in
South America and in Asia.
The most
suicide-prone countries were Guyana (44.2 per 100,000), followed by North and
South Korea (38.5 and 28.9, respectively).
Next came
Sri Lanka (28.8), Lithuania (28.2), Suriname (27.8), Mozambique (27.4), Nepal
and Tanzania (24.9 each), Burundi (23.1), India (21.1), and South Sudan (19.8).
Next were
Russia and Uganda (both with 19.5), Hungary (19.1), Japan (18.5), and Belarus
(18.3).
The UN
agency said its goal is to cut national suicide rates by 10 percent by 2020.
A major
challenge, it said, is that suicide victims are often from marginalized groups
of the population, many of them poor and vulnerable.
However,
“suicides are preventable,” Chan said.
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