Suicide topper, yet UT clocks decadal decline (Source: The Hindu)
When the General Assembly of the World Health
Organisation passed a resolution to reduce suicides by 10 per cent,
India was among the 120 countries to sign it. However, subsequently, the
nation with one of the highest suicide rates in the world has since
been silent about how exactly it is aiming at achieving this huge task.
On World Suicide Day, it is pertinent to raise questions about how the
country will achieve that target.
As per National
Crime Records Bureau, last year, there were 1,35,444 suicides in the
country. Going by the same source, there were 15 suicides every hour,
and 371 suicides a day. Clearly, India had good reason to sign on the
dotted line when the WHO put forth its proposal. Additionally, a paper
by Vikram Patel and Lakshmi Vijayakumar ‘Suicide mortality in India: a
nationally representative survey’ in The Lancet indicated that there was at least 25 per cent under-reporting.
While
rolling out a programme in pursuit of its goal of reducing the
suicides, the Centre could take lessons from the experience of a few
States (and Union Territories), including Kerala and Puducherry,
explains Lakshmi Vijayakumar, who founded Sneha, a suicide prevention
helpline in Chennai. A decade ago, Puducherry had a suicide rate of 57.9
and Kerala, 28.9, last year, it had come down to 36.8 and 24.3,
respectively.
The State governments tried outreach
programmes through the District Mental Health Programmes, and they seem
to have had an effect, Dr. Vijayakumar explains. “The basic problem is
that people believe suicide is not their problem – that suicide is an
individual’s right and we do not have any right to intervene. However,
there are factors impinging on the decision to kill oneself that we can
change: poverty, unemployment. Suicide is always due to a variety of
factors.”
“It is important to put suicide on the
agenda: planners and policymakers should realise it is a great drain on
resources because it takes away youth in the prime of their life. A
large proportion of adult suicide deaths occur between the ages of 15
years and 29 years in India,” she adds.
In addition,
for each completed suicide, there are many who attempted to kill
themselves but have survived, and families who continue to live on,
explains Shekar Saxena, Director, Department of Mental Health and
Substance Abuse, WHO.
“One thing relevant to India
is regulating the storage and availability of pesticides, which are used
by a large number of people,” he says. Public health measures include
restricting availability of fire arms and timely help to people at high
risk.
The first world suicide report is slated for
release next September, he informs. This is an initiative of the WHO, in
collaboration with various agencies globally. The focus is on the
numbers. We are hoping to calculate and estimate in a fresh way the
number of people who commit and attempt suicide. We are going back to
see what are the factors that are pushing them to it, and what we can do
for prevention.”
“In India, the plan is to involve a
broad network of all stakeholders from different arenas, and this time,
look into school data as well,” Dr. Vijayakumar, who will lead the
effort from India, adds.
Source : The Hindu
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