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Leading expert John Mann, Department of Psychiatry, Columbia University, New York, USA, raises awareness of the priority of the issue worldwide by identifying several steps towards more effective suicide prevention.
Professor Mann advises us to:
According to recent reports, someone in Poland takes their own life every 47 minutes. Poland has the third highest number of suicides amongst EU states; and more people die by their own hand than die in road accidents.
But the problem is everywhere. In the USA, suicide is the second most common cause of death among people aged 10-34 years. Worldwide, more people die by suicide than are killed in wars or by other forms of violence.1 So it is a truly global tragedy.
We need to identify and treat major depression more effectively – and that requires continuity of care
Restrict the means and expand the treatment
The presence of a psychiatric disorder - especially major depression - is the most important predictor of suicide. In the US, around 90% of people who commit suicide have a psychiatric disorder. Yet fewer than a third of them were receiving psychiatric treatment at the time they died. So, it is essential to identify and treat these patients adequately.
A clear way of reducing number of suicides is effectively treating major depressive disorder (MDD) with antidepressants (and possibly also cognitive behaviour therapy [CBT]), Professor Mann states.
Worldwide – and in contrast to the USA -- the suicide rate has fallen. The fact that this is due mostly to fewer pesticide deaths points the way to the other well-established means of prevention: restricting the means.
Someone who survives an initial suicide attempt has a more than 80% lifetime chance of not dying by suicide. So, it is vital to reduce the lethality of the means available for that first attempt. Along with reducing access to pesticides, this can be as simple as restricting the number of common over the counter pain tablets in a pack.
Survivors of an initial suicide attempt have a more than 80% chance of not dying by suicide
Identifying those most at risk
Most people who die from suicide are depressed. Yet most depressed people do not attempt or die from suicide. So, the risk clearly lies in a subgroup. These are people who attempt suicide early in the course of their disease.
About half the risk of suicide is genetic. Life events do, of course, play a role – but suicide is not simply a response to extreme stress or emotional pain. It is an abnormal response. The most important factors that reveal this risk are a past history of a suicide attempt, a family history of suicidal behavior, and a history of severe suicidal ideation.
In the US, around 90% of people who commit suicide have a psychiatric disorder. The majority are not receiving treatment at the time
Associations with neurobiology
Among the traits that contribute to a vulnerability to suicidal behavior are:
Professor Mann also cites studies implicating abnormalities in the function of neurotransmitter receptors related to depression. Thus higher 5-HT1A autoreceptor binding in the raphe nucleus at baseline predicted suicidal ideation and the greater lethality of suicide attempts during follow-up.5
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