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US suicide rates increased more than 25% since 1999: CDC

Charlemagne

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US suicide rates increased more than 25% since 1999: CDC

Sat Jun 9, 2018 09:45AM

Suicide rates increased by about 25 percent across the United States since 1999, with about 45,000 people dying from suicides in 2016 alone, according to research by the US government.

The US suicide rate increased in every state between 1999 and 2016 and firearms were the most common method used by people to take their own lives, according to a report released Thursday by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

All states experienced an increase in suicides and 25 states saw a rise of 30 percent, the CDC found.

More than half of those who died by suicide had not been diagnosed with a mental health condition, said Dr. Anne Schuchat, principal deputy director of the CDC.

"These findings are disturbing. Suicide is one of the top 10 causes of death in the US right now, and it's one of three causes that is actually increasing recently, so we do consider it a public health problem -- and something that is all around us," Schuchat said.

"Our data show that the problem is getting worse," she noted.

Suicide rates increased the most in some Western and Midwestern states, which are generally rural, including Montana, Idaho, Wyoming, North and South Dakota and Minnesota, as well as Kansas and Oklahoma.

The rate means that around 16 out of every 100,000 Americans will take their own life. Middle-age adults had the highest increase in suicides.

"This is a very important population right now in terms of national statistics," Schuchat said, noting the high rates of drug overdose in this group as well as "deaths of despair" described in social science literature.

The economic recession of the late 2000s and the increase of drug addiction are some of the other factors leading to more frequent incidents of suicide, said Kristin Holland, a behavioral scientist at the CDC.

Dr. Sandro Galea, dean of the Boston University School of Public Health said the new research should be taken "very seriously."

"There have been previous reports recently that have shown suicide is one of the major contributors to a decrease in life expectancy in this country, which makes it even more alarming," he said.

"CDC data shows that suicide happens to everybody," he said. "Social and life and economic stressors are the ones that create the conditions for suicides to happen."

The figures were released in the week when the deaths of celebrity chef Anthony Bourdain and fashion designer Kate Spade brought the issue to the fore.

http://www.presstv.com/Detail/2018/06/09/564417/US-suicide-rate-CDC.com

Vital Signs: Trends in State Suicide Rates — United States, 1999–2016 and Circumstances Contributing to Suicide — 27 States, 2015
https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/67/wr/mm6722a1.htm
 

Butler1000

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Betting the increase at least in large part can be attributed to two things. Veterans and opioid addiction.
 

mandrill

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Aug 23, 2001
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Betting the increase at least in large part can be attributed to two things. Veterans and opioid addiction.
Certainly veterans. Book I'm reading now is telling me that an all volunteer army means that a small, limited number of frontline troops are deployed over and over again and get serious burnout and mental damage.

Not sure about opioids. My sister lives in the Midwest and tells me that the rural midwest is a wasteland with few career opportunities and much drug abuse. Some of that is opioids. Some of that is crystal. And she comments on the high suicide rates as well.

So maybe a combination.
 

kkelso

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Apr 27, 2003
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Might be dumb luck, but isn't 1999 around the time people really jumped into the internet???
You beat me to it. The internet, and social media in particular, excels at showing us all how much everyone's life is better than own own.

KK
 

Occasionally

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May 22, 2011
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Yup.

Other people's accounts showing all rainbows where it's family cheer and someone bought a new million dollar home and asks everyone "Help? What colour granite countertops?". All the while, Tom just lost his job and is going through a divorce..... nothing great to show.

And the dark side of internet.... cyberbullying and negative online chat. Some people can take it, some can't.

Too much freedom does have drawbacks sometimes.
 

Keebler Elf

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Aug 31, 2001
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The Keebler Factory
You beat me to it. The internet, and social media in particular, excels at showing us all how much everyone's life is better than own own.
Didn't Aristotle have a story about people living ignorantly in their dark cave watching shadows on the wall?

Not sure people are truly better off living ignorantly about how "good" their own life is... (in the absence of the internet to tell them otherwise)
 

Scarey

Well-known member
As previously mentioned....the internet. I think people will look back in 100 years, and realize it was the beginning of the end. Sometimes fences do make good neighbors...….
 

kkelso

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Apr 27, 2003
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Didn't Aristotle have a story about people living ignorantly in their dark cave watching shadows on the wall?

Not sure people are truly better off living ignorantly about how "good" their own life is... (in the absence of the internet to tell them otherwise)
It's a fair point.

However, I would argue that in Aristotle's time (and long after, for that matter) if you walked down the local road and through your neighbor's farm, or to your local town, that what you would see reflected reality. In which case you would have been comparing your reality to someone else's reality. "Wow, my place is a grimy dump, but so is his".

With the internet and social media you're comparing your reality with someone else's fantasy, the self-idealize version of your neighbor's life. And on the internet everyone's your neighbor.

KK
 

VERYBADBOY

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Dec 22, 2003
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Back in the 6ix
Didn't Aristotle have a story about people living ignorantly in their dark cave watching shadows on the wall?

Not sure people are truly better off living ignorantly about how "good" their own life is... (in the absence of the internet to tell them otherwise)
It was actually Plato.. the allegory of the cave ... however not sure if it was his story or Socrates or perhaps someone before him as stories tended to be past down. Philosophy at that time was iffy.

VBB
 
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