SUICIDE HOTLINE NUMBER: (208) 227-2260 OR 1 (800) 564-2120
What should
you do if someone tells you they are thinking about suicide?
If someone tells you they are thinking about suicide, you should take their
distress seriously, listen non-judgmentally, and help them get to a
professional for evaluation and treatment. People consider suicide when they
are hopeless and unable to see alternative solutions to problems. Suicidal
behavior is most often related to a mental disorder (depression) or to
alcohol or other substance abuse. Suicidal behavior is also more likely to
occur when people experience stressful events (major losses, incarceration).
If someone is in imminent danger of harming himself or herself, do not leave
the person alone. You may need to take emergency steps to get help, such as
calling 911. When someone is in a suicidal crisis, it is important to limit
access to firearms or other lethal means of committing suicide.
What are the most common methods of suicide?
Firearms are the most commonly used method of suicide for men and women,
accounting for 60 percent of all suicides. Nearly 80 percent of all firearm
suicides are committed by white males. The second most common method for men
is hanging; for women, the second most common method is self-poisoning
including drug overdose. The presence of a firearm in the home has been
found to be an independent, additional risk factor for suicide. Thus, when a
family member or health care provider is faced with an individual at risk
for suicide, they should make sure that firearms are removed from the home.
Why do men commit suicide more often than women do?
More than four times as many men as women die by suicide; but women attempt
suicide more often during their lives than do men, and women report higher
rates of depression. Men and women use different suicide methods. Women in
all countries are more likely to ingest poisons than men. In countries where
the poisons are highly lethal and/or where treatment resources scarce,
rescue is rare and hence female suicides outnumber males.
Who is at highest risk for suicide in the U.S.?
There is a common perception that suicide rates are highest among the young.
However, it is the elderly, particularly older white males that have the
highest rates. And among white males 65 and older, risk goes up with age.
White men 85 and older have a suicide rate that is six times that of the
overall national rate. Some older persons are less likely to survive
attempts because they are less likely to recuperate. Over 70 percent of
older suicide victims have been to their primary care physician within the
month of their death, many did not tell their doctors they were depressed
nor did the doctor detect it. This has led to research efforts to determine
how to best improve physicians? abilities to detect and treat depression in
older adults.
Are gay and lesbian youth at high risk for suicide?
With regard to completed suicide, there are no national statistics for
suicide rates among gay, lesbian or bisexual (GLB) persons. Sexual
orientation is not a question on the death certificate, and to determine
whether rates are higher for GLB persons, we would need to know the
proportion of the U.S. population that considers themselves gay, lesbian or
bisexual. Sexual orientation is a personal characteristic that people can,
and often do choose to hide, so that in psychological autopsy studies of
suicide victims where risk factors are examined, it is difficult to know for
certain the victim?s sexual orientation. This is particularly a problem when
considering GLB youth who may be less certain of their sexual orientation
and less open. In the few studies examining risk factors for suicide where
sexual orientation was assessed, the risk for gay or lesbian persons did not
appear any greater than among heterosexuals, once mental and substance abuse
disorders were taken into account.
With regard to suicide attempts, several state and national studies have
reported that high school students who report to be homosexually and
bisexually active have higher rates of suicide thoughts and attempts in the
past year compared to youth with heterosexual experience. Experts have not
been in complete agreement about the best way to measure reports of
adolescent suicide attempts, or sexual orientation, so the data are subject
to question. But they do agree that efforts should focus on how to help GLB
youth grow up to be healthy and successful despite the obstacles that they
face. Because school based suicide awareness programs have not proven
effective for youth in general, and in some cases have caused increased
distress in vulnerable youth, they are not likely to be helpful for GLB
youth either. Because young people should not be exposed to programs that do
not work, and certainly not to programs that increase risk, more research is
needed to develop safe and effective programs.
Are African American youth at great risk for
suicide?
Historically, African Americans have had much lower rates of suicides
compared to white Americans. However, beginning in the 1980s, the rates for
African American male youth began to rise at a much faster rate than their
white counterparts. The most recent trends suggest a decrease in suicide
across all gender and racial groups, but health policy experts remain
concerned about the increase in suicide by firearms for all young males.
Whether African American male youth are more likely to engage in
?victim-precipitated homicide? by deliberately getting in the line of fire
of either gang or law enforcement activity, remains an important research
question, as such deaths are not typically classified as suicides.
Is suicide related to impulsiveness?
Impulsiveness is the tendency to act without thinking through a plan or its
consequences. It is a symptom of a number of mental disorders, and
therefore, it has been linked to suicidal behavior usually through its
association with mental disorders and/or substance abuse. The mental
disorders with impulsiveness most linked to suicide include borderline
personality disorder among young females, conduct disorder among young males
and antisocial behavior in adult males, and alcohol and substance abuse
among young and middle-aged males. Impulsiveness appears to have a lesser
role in older adult suicides. Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder that
has impulsiveness as a characteristic is not a strong risk factor for
suicide by itself. Impulsiveness has been linked with aggressive and violent
behaviors including homicide and suicide. However, impulsiveness without
aggression or violence present has also been found to contribute to risk for
suicide.
Is there such a thing as "rational" suicide?
Some right-to-die advocacy groups promote the idea that suicide, including
assisted suicide, can be a rational decision. Others have argued that
suicide is never a rational decision and that it is the result of
depression, anxiety, and fear of being dependent or a burden. Surveys of
terminally ill persons indicate that very few consider taking their own
life, and when they do, it is in the context of depression. Attitude surveys
suggest that assisted suicide is more acceptable by the public and health
providers for the old who are ill or disabled, compared to the young who are
ill or disabled. At this time, there is limited research on the frequency
with which persons with terminal illness have depression and suicidal
ideation, whether they would consider assisted suicide, the characteristics
of such persons, and the context of their depression and suicidal thoughts,
such as family stress, or availability of palliative care. Neither is it yet
clear what effect other factors such as the availability of social support,
access to care, and pain relief may have on end-of-life preferences. This
public debate will be better informed after such research is conducted.
What biological factors increase risk for suicide?
Researchers believe that both depression and suicidal behavior can be linked
to decreased serotonin in the brain. Low levels of a serotonin metabolite,
5-HIAA, have been detected in cerebral spinal fluid in persons who have
attempted suicide, as well as by postmortem studies examining certain brain
regions of suicide victims. One of the goals of understanding the biology of
suicidal behavior is to improve treatments. Scientists have learned that
serotonin receptors in the brain increase their activity in persons with
major depression and suicidality, which explains why medications that
desensitize or down-regulate these receptors (such as the serotonin reuptake
inhibitors, or SSRIs) have been found effective in treating depression.
Currently, studies are underway to examine to what extent medications like
SSRIs can reduce suicidal behavior.
Can the risk for suicide be inherited?
There is growing evidence that familial and genetic factors contribute to
the risk for suicidal behavior. Major psychiatric illnesses, including
bipolar disorder, major depression, schizophrenia, alcoholism and substance
abuse, and certain personality disorders, which run in families, increase
the risk for suicidal behavior. This does not mean that suicidal behavior is
inevitable for individuals with this family history; it simply means that
such persons may be more vulnerable and should take steps to reduce their
risk, such as getting evaluation and treatment at the first sign of mental
illness.
Does depression increase the risk for suicide?
Although the majority of people who have depression do not die by suicide,
having major depression does increase suicide risk compared to people
without depression. The risk of death by suicide may, in part, be related to
the severity of the depression. New data on depression that has followed
people over long periods of time suggests that about 2 percent of those
people ever treated for depression in an outpatient setting will die by
suicide. Among those ever treated for depression in an inpatient hospital
setting, the rate of death by suicide is twice as high (4 percent). Those
treated for depression as inpatients following suicide ideation or suicide
attempts are about three times as likely to die by suicide (6 percent) as
those who were only treated as outpatients. There are also dramatic gender
differences in lifetime risk of suicide in depression. Whereas about 7
percent of men with a lifetime history of depression will die by suicide,
only 1 percent of women with a lifetime history of depression will die by
suicide.
Another way about thinking of suicide risk and depression is to examine the
lives of people who have died by suicide and see what proportion of them
were depressed. From that perspective, it is estimated that about 60 percent
of people who commit suicide have had a mood disorder (e.g., major
depression, bipolar disorder, dysthymia). Younger persons who kill
themselves often have a substance abuse disorder in addition to being
depressed.
Does alcohol and other drug abuse increase the risk
for suicide?
A number of recent national surveys have helped shed light on the
relationship between alcohol and other drug use and suicidal behavior. A
review of minimum-age drinking laws and suicides among youths age 18 to 20
found that lower minimum-age drinking laws was associated with higher youth
suicide rates. In a large study following adults who drink alcohol, suicide
ideation was reported among persons with depression. In another survey,
persons who reported that they had made a suicide attempt during their
lifetime were more likely to have had a depressive disorder, and many also
had an alcohol and/or substance abuse disorder. In a study of all nontraffic
injury deaths associated with alcohol intoxication, over 20 percent were
suicides.
In studies that examine risk factors among people who have completed
suicide, substance use and abuse occurs more frequently among youth and
adults, compared to older persons. For particular groups at risk, such as
American Indians and Alaskan Natives, depression and alcohol use and abuse
are the most common risk factors for completed suicide. Alcohol and
substance abuse problems contribute to suicidal behavior in several ways.
Persons who are dependent on substances often have a number of other risk
factors for suicide. In addition to being depressed, they are also likely to
have social and financial problems. Substance use and abuse can be common
among persons prone to be impulsive, and among persons who engage in many
types of high risk behaviors that result in self-harm. Fortunately, there
are a number of effective prevention efforts that reduce risk for substance
abuse in youth, and there are effective treatments for alcohol and substance
use problems. Researchers are currently testing treatments specifically for
persons with substance abuse problems who are also suicidal, or have
attempted suicide in the past.
What does "suicide contagion" mean, and what can be
done to prevent it?
Suicide contagion is the exposure to suicide or suicidal behaviors within
one's family, one's peer group, or through media reports of suicide and can
result in an increase in suicide and suicidal behaviors. Direct and indirect
exposure to suicidal behavior has been shown to precede an increase in
suicidal behavior in persons at risk for suicide, especially in adolescents
and young adults.
The risk for suicide contagion as a result of media reporting can be
minimized by factual and concise media reports of suicide. Reports of
suicide should not be repetitive, as prolonged exposure can increase the
likelihood of suicide contagion. Suicide is the result of many complex
factors; therefore media coverage should not report oversimplified
explanations such as recent negative life events or acute stressors. Reports
should not divulge detailed descriptions of the method used to avoid
possible duplication. Reports should not glorify the victim and should not
imply that suicide was effective in achieving a personal goal such as
gaining media attention. In addition, information such as hotlines or
emergency contacts should be provided for those at risk for suicide.
Following exposure to suicide or suicidal behaviors within one's family or
peer group, suicide risk can be minimized by having family members, friends,
peers, and colleagues of the victim evaluated by a mental health
professional. Persons deemed at risk for suicide should then be referred for
additional mental health services.
Is it possible to predict suicide?
At the current time there is no definitive measure to predict suicide or
suicidal behavior. Researchers have identified factors that place
individuals at higher risk for suicide, but very few persons with these risk
factors will actually commit suicide. Risk factors include mental illness,
substance abuse, previous suicide attempts, family history of suicide,
history of being sexually abused, and impulsive or aggressive tendencies.
Suicide is a relatively rare event and it is therefore difficult to predict
which persons with these risk factors will ultimately commit suicide.