Official
press release
A new report
will better position government and its partners to help Nova Scotians at risk
of attempting suicide.
The report,
Suicide and Attempted Suicide in Nova Scotia, was released today, July 15. Its
purpose is to help those who work in the areas of suicide prevention,
intervention and support.
"Suicide
is a very complex and sensitive public health issue," said Dr. Robert
Strang, Nova Scotia's chief public health officer. "We need to talk about
it more and better understand it to ensure the right programs and supports are
in place to help Nova Scotians."
The report
describes the conditions surrounding suicide and attempted suicide in Nova
Scotia. The data is based on hospital and vital statistics records of suicides
and suicide attempts from 1995 to 2004. It examines demographic factors, how
people attempt suicide and complete suicide, and the types of health-care
services used by Nova Scotians at risk.
"This
report is a baseline we can use to evaluate future efforts on this important
issue, and we've made good progress since 2004," said Dr. Strang.
"We've developed a suicide prevention framework to reduce suicides and
attempted suicides, we're doing additional research with the medical examiner's
office, and we fund our community partners who work with Nova Scotians."
Dr. Stan
Kutcher, Sun Life Financial Chair in Adolescent Mental Health, a partnership
with the IWK Health Centre and Dalhousie University, said that even though
suicide and suicide attempt rates are decreasing, and Nova Scotia is
experiencing lower suicide rates than most Canadian provinces, there is more to
be done. "Improving care for people with mental disorders, enhancing the
capability of health care and education professionals to identify people at
risk, promoting overall good health and resiliency, and improving access to
good mental health care, can all help further reduce Nova Scotia's suicide
rates.
" Highlights
of the report include:
- The rate of hospitalizations
for suicide attempts declined by 30 per cent over the 10-year period
- 55 per cent of those
hospitalized were female
- Lower income was associated
with higher rates of both hospitalizations for suicide attempts and
suicide deaths
- The rate of suicide death
declined from 11 to nine individuals per 100,000
- Nova Scotia's suicide rate was
lower than the national average, nine out of 100,000 individuals compared
to 11 out of 100,000
- 84 per cent of suicide deaths
were male
- 55 per cent of suicide deaths
were previously diagnosed with a mental disorder
The report is
available online at www.gov.ns.ca/hpp.
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