Pandemic pushing people to seek suicide prevention help in record numbers

Social isolation and the disrupted economy are the two biggest threats to suicide prevention over the next 12 months, says a report released to mark World Suicide Prevention Day.

Women are significantly more concerned about suicide risks in all of the top categories compared to men, a report says.

Record numbers of Australians are coming forward to seek help from suicide prevention services. Source: AAP

Record numbers of people are coming forward to seek help from suicide prevention services, with women, Indigenous Australians and members of the LGBTQI+ community among those in greatest need of support.

Both the mental health sector and the public see social isolation and the disrupted economy as the two biggest threats over the next 12 months, according to a report released on Friday to mark World Suicide Prevention Day.

Straining an already stretched sector, 84 per cent of suicide prevention professionals have experienced an increase in demand in the past 12 months.
Lifeline is taking the highest daily number of calls in the organisation's history as repeated lockdowns and ongoing COVID-19 disruption push people to the brink.

The calls for government funding to keep pace with rising levels of distress and for decision-makers to think beyond their own areas of responsibility.

"It's no good having a minister for health or a minister for women who knows nothing about the suicide risks faced by the people their portfolio represents," one survey respondent said.

Another person surveyed said, "housing is suicide prevention, employment is suicide prevention, finance is suicide prevention, access to legal support is suicide prevention".

Advocate Nieves Murray said young people were seeking help at twice the rate of their parents' generations, following decades of work on countering the stigma around mental health.
Women are significantly more concerned about suicide risks in all of the top categories compared to men.

These included social isolation and loneliness (70 per cent versus 58 per cent), unemployment and job security (64 per cent versus 53 per cent), family and relationship breakdowns (62 per cent versus 52 per cent), and the cost of living and household debt (61 per cent versus 50 per cent).

The gap was closer on suicide risks from drug and alcohol abuse at 56 per cent for women versus 50 per cent for men, and housing access and affordability (39 per cent versus 32 per cent).

Just three per cent believed services for priority populations were appropriately funded.
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples had the greatest need for more support, according to the data.

Lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, intersex and queer communities and culturally and linguistically diverse communities were also being left behind.

Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Psychiatrists president Vinay Lakra said there was a "significant shortage" of the psychiatrists needed to service mental health needs.

"This has only been further exacerbated by the surge in mental health demand during COVID, with wait times as long as nine months," he said.

Ongoing gaps in critical data were also found to be limiting efforts to prevent suicide.

Two-thirds of Australians support a Suicide Prevention Act similar to Japan, which once had the world's highest suicide rate before it began to look across society and government to turn it around.

If you or someone you know is in immediate crisis, please call police and ambulance on 000.

Readers seeking support with mental health can contact Lifeline crisis support on 13 11 14,  on 1300 224 636, or  on 1300 659 467. supports people from culturally and linguistically diverse backgrounds.  


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3 min read
Published 10 September 2021 8:59am
Updated 22 February 2022 5:26pm
Source: AAP, SBS



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