Suicide up during holidays?

by meadow77 10 Replies latest jw friends

  • meadow77
    meadow77

    By Denise Mann
    WebMD Medical News

    Reviewed by Dr. Tonja Wynn Hampton

    Dec. 26, 2000 -- Contrary to previous media reports, suicide rates do not increase during the holiday season. In fact, November and December rank lowest in terms of daily suicide rates.

    A new study shows that the media actually perpetuates this myth. In fact, two out of three stories incorrectly link suicides to the holidays, according to an analysis by the Annenberg Public Policy Center of the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia and the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention in New York.

    To arrive at their findings, researchers examined print stories on suicide that ran from Nov. 8, 1999 through Jan. 15, 2000 and found that only 13% of stories attempted to set straight the myth that suicides rate increase during Thanksgiving and Christmas.

    It turns out that April tends to have the highest suicide rates, according to Herbert Hendin, MD, medical director of the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention. Exactly why suicide rates rise in April is unclear, but as American poet and playwright T.S. Eliot put it, April is the cruelest month.

    Perhaps, Hendin says, unreasonable expectations of springtime peak in April and people commit suicide when they realize they are not living up to their expectations.

    In the U.S., suicide is the eighth leading cause of death and the third leading cause of death among teenagers. In 1998, over 30,000 Americans took their own lives.

    "No question about it," Hendin tells WebMD, "the idea that suicide peaks during the holidays is a myth [and] we have been telling the media that for years."

    Still, each year Hendin gets calls about it. "The media have a fondness for this story. I think it probably arose from the fact that people without families or who have lost somebody are often sad around Christmas because of the absence of the person or persons," he says.

    "Suicide is a product of mental illness and 95% of people who commit suicide are mentally ill -- most commonly with depression," Hendin tells WebMD. "The type of depressed person that is at risk is often agitated, anxious and a substance abuser."

    However, depression is one of the most treatable mental illnesses.

    Glen Gabbard, MD, a psychiatrist and psychoanalyst at Menninger in Topeka, Kan., agrees. The most important message, holidays or no holidays, is that suicidality is treatable, he tells WebMD. Most suicidal people have a treatable psychiatric disorder and treatment may mean antidepressants, abstinence from alcohol or other drugs and/or psychotherapy.

    "Studies of suicide have shown that isolation is one of the risk factors and the majority of us are not isolated during the holidays," Gabbard says. But he adds that feelings of hopelessness, another important predictor of suicide risk, should be taken very seriously.

  • SixofNine
    SixofNine

    Thanks for posting this meadow. One more belief down the tubes, lol.

    Snopes (the urban legend web-site) has a good article on this too; "Evidence suggests that holiday depression is about as real as Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer. "

  • unclebruce
    unclebruce

    g'day Meadow77,

    That "depression is one of the most treatable of mental illnesses" is great news to anyone affected by the JW cult. Thanks for the positive message.

    I'd kill myself but i'm having too much of a good time right now. (last week was different but a quick trip to hospital, a gall bladder removed and life be better than ever, THANKS FOR ASKING!

    We all have problems. I have a daughter who feels rejected and i wish she'd make contact. All i can do is hope renee gets through the gloom and comes back to me next year.

    unclebruce, alone but not lonely.

    mmm .. i've been misunderstood before on suicide ...

    ps: thick-heads and negitivitists note: life's tough and i'm not making light of anyone-elses pain. (someone had to reply to this post

    Edited by - unclebruce on 15 December 2002 19:52:29

  • orangefatcat
    orangefatcat

    A friend of mine committed suicide last Sunday. I was so saddened to hear about it because he was such as nice guy. He suffered alot of physical pain, but recently his wife left him and she took his daughter with her and he just couldn't take it and I guess between that and his pain he just had enough and so killed himself. I can't believe it. He was the sweetest and one of the most caring persons who always asked me how I was doing and how my pain was and if the doctor was taking good care of me as we shared the same specialist. How sad I am and how difficult it will be for his little girl during the Holiday Season without her daddy.

    Yes the Holidays seem to be the worst of times.

    Orangefatcat

  • Robdar
    Robdar

    A friend of mine gets very depressed during this time of the year. It is also her birthday a week before Christmas. I think the stress of not having money and being another year older taxes her. Her mother, a former alcoholic, also comes to visti her this time of year and it stresses my girlfriend no end. She loses weight, she gets sick and she breaks out in cold sores. For some, this time of year is extremely stressful.

    Her psychiatrist recently told her to go to a tanning bed. It seems that the shortness of the winter days and the resulting lack of sunshine affects some people. I have bought her a sun lamp for Christmas. I hope this helps her to feel better.

    Robyn

  • rebel
    rebel

    I don't think suicides are higher at this time of year, but marriage break-ups are. Marriage guidance counsellors are apparently swamped over the Christmas break. They say it is because families are all together, on hols from work and school, and just don't get on. Then the in-laws come to visit, and old aunties and uncles creep out of the woodwork. The strain on some marriages is immense, trying to deal with all these alien family members and making out they are having a great time when really, they are hating it. Many are not used to being confined to the house for so long - they want to excape back to the normality of work. It is sad to think that many people can't take being together with their families and would rather seek out their workmates.

  • Yerusalyim
    Yerusalyim

    Meadow,

    Good for you for posting this. I work in the field of Suicide Prevention/Intervention. This myth has been around for a long time, and dies hard. The reason April has the higher rate is beleived to be rooted in people anticipating a change in mood/circumstances, with the change of the seasons. When this doesn't happen they lose hope.

    The reason the rates are actually lower during the Holiday seasons is because people are more willing to reach out to others at this time of year.

  • Spartacus
    Spartacus

    Man plunges from Galleria-area tower

    From staff and wire reports

    Karl Stolleis / Chronicle A climber scales Williams Tower just minutes before plunging to his death.
    A man who climbed the Williams Tower near the Galleria this morning plunged from the 30th floor and died, authorities said.

    Although witnesses and Houston Fire Department officials originally said it appeared the man jumped, police said it wasn't clear whether the man jumped or merely became exhausted and pushed away from the building.

    Police recovered a driver's license and a note reportedly containing a message of a political nature. Authorities declined to reveal the man's identity or details of the note, other than to say that the climber was a 20-year-old white male and that his note did not mention plans to jump.

    Houston Police Department spokesman Joe Laud said this morning's incident may have started around 5:30 a.m. when a bomb threat was called in from the Galleria area. Police would not say if the threat was to Williams Tower, but police did make a check of the building. As officers were starting to leave around 6:30 a.m., a worker with the property management office told police a man was attempting to climb the tower.

    A spokesman for the Houston Fire Department, which sent rescue crews to the tower at 2800 Post Oak Boulevard, reported that the man somehow found a way outside of the gleaming skscraper on the 10th floor and began climbing near the southwest corner.

    Chronicle
    He was not harnessed to the building in any way. Laud said officers reported the man would climb until he got tired and would then attach some type of suction cup to the tower's glass windows and hold on to the cup with his teeth while he rested.

    Police tried to talk to the man from an open window a few floors below as he continued to ascend.

    About 7:45 a.m., however, as news helicopters hovered and spectators watched from nearby buildings and the city's busiest freeway, Loop 610, he apparently let go, Houston Fire Department spokesman Jay Evans said.

    Rosendo Lopez, a labor foreman working across the street from Williams Tower, saw the scene unfold from the magnifying lens of a piece of construction equipment. About halfway up the 901-foot building, the man paused, Lopez said.

    "I saw him look back over his shoulder and push himself away from the building. He shoved his whole body with his hands and legs," Lopez said.

    Witness Pat McGarey, a tower worker, said the man had been yelling or singing and periodically waved his hands.

    Karl Stolleis / Chronicle Houston firefighters cover the body of a man who tumbled from the Williams Tower in the Galleria area this morning.
    "It clearly looked like he jumped as opposed to falling," McGarey said.

    Police said the man landed in the grass, and his hands were bloody.

    Evans said most climbers in Houston have either reached the top of the buildings or are talked into coming inside.

    "We've been very fortunate here in Houston, with many tall buildings," Evans said.

    The Williams Tower, a Houston landmark formerly known as the Transco Tower, is 64 stories high. The glass and steel tower was designed by the famous architect Philip Johnson and built in 1983.

    Houston police have taken over the investigation, and a doctor with the Harris County Medical Examiner's office arrived on the scene about 9:40 a.m.

    http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/printstory.hts/topstory/1704072

    Edited by - Spartacus on 16 December 2002 12:42:29

  • meadow77
    meadow77

    That's very interesting Spartacus-but I'm not sure what your position is on the suicide rate and the holidays. Did you have a comment?

  • Spartacus
    Spartacus

    Yes, I do believe people are more depressed during the holidays. One factor is IMO less sun light during this time of the year, also the holidays causes people to evaluate their lot in life which is often undesirable which leads into a funk.

    But on the other hand most people love this time of the year, I do :)

    Edited by - Spartacus on 18 December 2002 9:33:4

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