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RLD SUICIDE PREVENTION DAY


STRENGTHENING PROTECTIVE FACTORS
        INSTILLING HOPE
                    Gregory Luke Larkin MD MS MSPH FACEP
                Lion Foundation Chair of Emergency Medicine
                                       Annette Beautrais PhD
                                       Senior Research Fellow
    The University of Auckland, South Auckland Clinical School
                                         l.larkin@auckland.ac.nz,
                                      a.beautrais@auckland.ac.nz
AGENDA
   Magnitude of the Problem
   The Problem of Suicide in New Zealand
   Risk and Protective Factors
     Micro–level   (Individual)
     Meso-level    (Community, Organisation)
     Macro-level   (State, National)
   Your questions
MAGNITUDE OF THE PROBLEM
WORLD SUICIDE RATES
MAGNITUDE OF THE PROBLEM

 >1 million deaths worldwide EVERY year - an under-
  estimate

    51% of all violent deaths
    More deaths than all wars & homicides combined

 In any one year - 4% have thoughts of suicide, 1% plan
  (WMHS)

 Overall rate of suicide has NOT declined in the past decade;
SUICIDE


   Under-counted
   Under-recognised
   Under-funded (prevention)
   Under-addressed

 Poorly understood
 PREVENTABLE in many cases
A DIFFICULT PUBLIC HEALTH PROBLEM

 In top 10 causes of death worldwide
 In top 3 causes of death in 15-35 age group
 Annual global rate - 16 per 100,000 people (3-4X higher in men)


 Despite considerable research & new knowledge, relatively little progress
  in developing effective interventions

 By contrast, reductions in CVD, stroke, MVA, HIV/AIDS, homicide, cancers

 Suicide is a more difficult, complex problem than these issues.
PREDICTIONS

By 2020
    depression will be the 2nd major cause of YPLLs & DALYs
      (after CVD)

    Suicides - estimated 1.5 million p.a. worldwide
SUICIDE IN NEW ZEALAND
NZ suicide deaths and rates

         2004   2005   2006   2007   2008   2009   2010
Numbers
Total   486     511    524    483    497    506    522
Male     379    380    386    370    366    391    380
Female   109    131    138    113    131    115    142

Rates
Total    11.7   12.2   12.2   11.0   11.2   11.2   11.5
Male     18.6   18.6   18.5   17.4   16.9   17.8   16.0
Female   5.2    6.0    6.3    4.9    5.8    5.0    6.4
0
                  5
                      10
                           15
                                20
                                     25
                                                    30
       1948




                                                         Rate
       1950
       1952
       1954
       1956
       1958
       1960
       1962
       1964
       1966
       1968
       1970
       1972
       1974
       1976
       1978




Year
       1980
       1982
       1984
       1986
       1988
       1990
       1992
       1994
       1996
       1998
       2000
       2002
       2004
       2006
                                          Males




       2008
                                          Females
                                                                Suicide age-standardised rates, by sex, 1948-2010




       2010
Suicide as a percentage of all deaths in that age group 2010

       Percent
  45
                                                                                                   Males
                                                                                                   Females
  40


  35


  30


  25


  20


  15


  10


   5


   0
       5–9   10–14 15–19 20–24 25–29 30–34 35–39 40–44 45–49 50–54 55–59 60–64 65–69 70–74 75–79 80–84   85+
                                                 Five-year age group
Suicide age-specific death rates, by 5-year age group, 2010

        Rate
   60
                                                                                                          Males
                                                                                                          Females

   50




   40




   30




   20




   10




    0
        15–19   20–24   25–29   30–34   35–39   40–44   45–49   50–54   55–59   60–64   65–69   70–74   75–79   80–84   85+

                                                        Five-year age group
Māori and non-Māori suicide rates, by sex 1996-2010

     Rate
35
                                                                                                Māori males
                                                                                                Māori females
30                                                                                              Non-Māori males
                                                                                                Non-Māori females


25



20



15



10



 5



 0
     1996   1997   1998   1999   2000   2001   2002   2003   2004   2005   2006   2007   2008      2009   2010

                                                      Year
Methods of NZ suicide deaths 2010
                                     Submersion (drowning)
                                            1.5%

                                            Firearms and explosives
                                                      8.0%
                                                 Cutting and piercing
                                                      instrument
                                                         1.7%
Hanging, strangulation                             Jumping from high place
   and suffocation                                           1.7%
       60.5%
                                                    Other and unspecified
                                                           means
                                                            3.3%



                                                 Poisoning – liquids and
                                                         solids
                                                         11.9%




                                  Poisoning – gases and
                                         vapours
                                          11.3%
New Zealand Suicide Prevention Strategy




http://www.moh.govt.nz/moh.nsf/indexmh/suicidepr
evention-strategyandplan#strategy
NZ - SUICIDE PREVENTION STRATEGY

NZSPS – 7 goals
     promote mental health & wellbeing
     improve care of people with mental disorders associated with suicidal
      behaviours
     improve care of attempters
     reduce access to means of suicide
     promote safe reporting & portrayal of suicidal behaviour by the
      media
     provide postvention support
     expand evidence about rates, causes & effective interventions.
RISK & PROTECTIVE FACTORS
19
MICRO-LEVEL RISK FACTORS
   Genetic vulnerabilities
   Psychiatric illness
   Impulsivity
   Aggression
   Hopelessness
   Previous suicide attempts
   Poor coping skills
   Physical illness/injury, TBI, PTSD
   Sexual orientation
MICRO-LEVEL PREVENTION STRATEGIES

Individual interventions
   Psychotherapy,   medication, psychosocial support
    Diet, exercise
   Building coping skills, resiliency (e.g. anger/conflict
    management), optimism, wellness
   Impulsivity/anger management

   Cyber, phone, txt msg interventions

   Medication, appointment reminders

   Tailored safety planning
PROTECTIVE FACTORS – HEALTH

Micro-level (Individual) activities
 Acute distress or crisis

      Engage with health services
      Keep appointments
      Take medications and follow treatments as prescribed
      Have a safety plan, & follow it when you encounter difficulties
      Ensure you are safe
      If things don’t get better, ask for help
      Ask for help and support from family, friends, health services
      Go to the ED or local Psych Emergency Services
      Call helplines - Free 0800 543 354;
      If immediate danger - call 111
PROTECTIVE FACTORS - PSYCHOLOGICAL

Most people exposed to difficult life experiences do not die by
suicide. Likely explained by differences in protective factors:
 Resilience - ability to cope with, and adjust to adversity

   A sense of self-worth and self-efficacy
   Effective coping and problem-solving skills
   Outward focus (serving others)
   Adaptive help-seeking behaviour
   Life satisfaction
   A positive therapeutic relationship
PROTECTIVE FACTORS – HEALTH

Micro-level (Individual) activities
 Specific daily wellbeing practices

     Diet
     Keep a gratitude journal
     Keep a hope box
     Make plans, set challenges for yourself
     Volunteer activities – help others
     Pets - responsibility/exercise
     Ensure social contact
     Take up hobbies, exercise, interests
PROTECTIVE FACTORS – HEALTH

Most people who die by suicide are depressed but not taking
effective antidepressants
 Many not diagnosed

 Of those diagnosed, many are untreated or under-treated

 Many more do not take their meds as prescribed.

YET
 There are effective medications and therapies

 Educate primary care (GPs) to assess, treat and manage
   depressed & suicidal patients
 Encourage help-seeking, adherence with treatments & meds
PROTECTIVE FACTORS - INDIVIDUAL & SOCIAL

     Social connectedness, good relationships with friends,
           colleagues and neighbours
     Social support from other people
         Marriage - men; children for women (but cannot prescribe!)
     Religious/spiritual beliefs
MESO-LEVEL RISK FACTORS
   Relationship, legal, financial, disciplinary problems
   Physical and emotional abuse, neglect, bullying
   Family violence
   Parental psychopathology
   Unemployment
   Social isolation
   Academic pressures
   Institutional settings (prisons, services, schools)
   Clusters and contagion
   Healthcare settings (inpatient units)
MESO-LEVEL STRATEGIES
   Institutional strategies
       Education, screening, skills building, gatekeeper support
   Psychosocial interventions
       Anti-bullying, IPV screening, parenting/family support, crisis lines,
        social support
   Primary care screening, assessment, education
   Healthcare settings (EDs, inpatient units)
   Community settings
       Cluster management, postvention/bereavement support,
        workplace support
MACRO-LEVEL RISK FACTORS
   Public laws/policies (e.g. drug & alcohol access)
   Season/weather
   Disasters (long term)
   Media over-reporting
   Cyber-exposure; cyber bullying;
   Social disintegration, individualism, materialism
   Globalisation, macro-economic restructuring
   Cultural differences/isolation
MACRO-LEVEL STRATEGIES
   Community, state, national policy interventions
     Means  restrictions
     Drugs/alcohol policies

     Media guidelines

    Health & wellness promotion
    Social policies & employment
    Health literacy, destigmatisation
    Public service messages
    Media and cyber-based programmes
PROTECTIVE FACTORS – MEANS RESTRICTION

    Suicidal behaviour is often ambivalent & impulsive, and/or
     contemplated when someone is intoxicated

    May not be pursued if access to a favoured method or a
     particular site of suicide is thwarted.

    Therefore restricting access to means of suicide is a very
     effective protection against suicide

    Shown for domestic gas, VEG, metro railway systems, guns,
     bridges, jumping sites, medications - prescribed & OTC
RE-INSTALLING BARRIERS
33

     Grafton Bridge, Auckland, New Zealand
        Removal of safety barriers in place 60 yrs led to a 5.6-fold increase in Ss
         from the bridge – 3 Ss in the 4 years prior to removal, 19 Ss in 5 yrs after
         removal.
        Reinstatement of barriers eliminated Ss from the bridge and appears to
         have decreased Ss by jumping the city. No increase in Ss by jumping from
         other sites.                      Beautrais et al, 2010
SUICIDES AT GRAFTON BRIDGE
34




                           19




                3

                                         0
           1992-1995   1997-2001   2002-Present
STRENGTHENING PROTECTIVE FACTORS & INSTILLING HOPE

          WINNING WAYS TO WELLBEING
ADVANCING SUICIDE PREVENTION
          INSTILLING HOPE
   We now have a sufficient body of evidence and data about
    risk & protective factors for suicide.
   The time to convert that evidence into effective programmes
    is NOW.
   Requires sustained investment in funding, training &
    development of a suicide research & prevention workforce,
    and in IT, regulatory & funding infrastructures which support
    suicide prevention


   The present absence of strong evidence for effective
    programmes is a call for action
KEYNOTE SPEAKERS
CONFERENCE SPEAKERS

 Professor Sir Peter Gluckman                          Professor Jane Pirkis
 Prime Minister's Science Adviser, New Zealand         University of Melbourne, Australia

 Professor Eric Caine                                  Professor David Fergusson
 University of Rochester School of Medicine            University of Otago, Christchurch New Zealand
 Rochester, NY, USA
                                                       Professor G Luke Larkin
 Paul Kelly                                            The University of Auckland, New Zealand
 CEO, Console Ireland
                                                       Assoc. Professor Sally Merry
 Dr John Crawshaw                                      The University of Auckland, New Zealand
 Director of Mental Health, Ministry of Health, New
 Zealand                                               Dr Shyamala Nada-Raja
                                                       University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand
 Di Grennell
 Te Puni Kokiri, New Zealand                           Dr Jemaima Tiatia
                                                       Centre for Pacific Studies The University of Auckland,
 Professor Helen Christensen                           New Zealand
 Executive Director, Black Dog Institute, Sydney, &
 Professor of Mental Health, University of New South   Sandra Palmer & Eliza Snelgar,
 Wales, Australia                                      Community Postvention Response Service (CPRS),
                                                       CASA, New Zealand
 Professor Simon Hatcher              University of
 Ottawa, Canada
                                                       Dr Nik Coupe
CONFERENCE TOPICS
 TOPICS
    The science of suicide          New Zealand suicide
     prevention                       prevention policy
    Suicide clusters                Pacific suicide prevention
    e-health and suicide            The Emergency Department
     prevention                       as a site for suicide
                                      prevention
    Suicide as a public health
     problem                         Pathways to suicide
    Postvention                     Public/private partnerships
                                      in suicide prevention
    Māori and suicide
     prevention
SUICIDE PREVENTION 2012: IDEAS, INNOVATION, IMPLEMENTATION




        FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 28TH, 2012
        8.30am to 5pm
        ELLERSLIE EVENT CENTRE



       www.suicideprevention2012.weebly.com

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World Suicide Prevention Day webinar 2012

  • 1. RLD SUICIDE PREVENTION DAY STRENGTHENING PROTECTIVE FACTORS INSTILLING HOPE Gregory Luke Larkin MD MS MSPH FACEP Lion Foundation Chair of Emergency Medicine Annette Beautrais PhD Senior Research Fellow The University of Auckland, South Auckland Clinical School l.larkin@auckland.ac.nz, a.beautrais@auckland.ac.nz
  • 2. AGENDA  Magnitude of the Problem  The Problem of Suicide in New Zealand  Risk and Protective Factors  Micro–level (Individual)  Meso-level (Community, Organisation)  Macro-level (State, National)  Your questions
  • 5. MAGNITUDE OF THE PROBLEM  >1 million deaths worldwide EVERY year - an under- estimate  51% of all violent deaths  More deaths than all wars & homicides combined  In any one year - 4% have thoughts of suicide, 1% plan (WMHS)  Overall rate of suicide has NOT declined in the past decade;
  • 6. SUICIDE  Under-counted  Under-recognised  Under-funded (prevention)  Under-addressed  Poorly understood  PREVENTABLE in many cases
  • 7. A DIFFICULT PUBLIC HEALTH PROBLEM  In top 10 causes of death worldwide  In top 3 causes of death in 15-35 age group  Annual global rate - 16 per 100,000 people (3-4X higher in men)  Despite considerable research & new knowledge, relatively little progress in developing effective interventions  By contrast, reductions in CVD, stroke, MVA, HIV/AIDS, homicide, cancers  Suicide is a more difficult, complex problem than these issues.
  • 8. PREDICTIONS By 2020  depression will be the 2nd major cause of YPLLs & DALYs (after CVD)  Suicides - estimated 1.5 million p.a. worldwide
  • 9. SUICIDE IN NEW ZEALAND
  • 10. NZ suicide deaths and rates 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 Numbers Total 486 511 524 483 497 506 522 Male 379 380 386 370 366 391 380 Female 109 131 138 113 131 115 142 Rates Total 11.7 12.2 12.2 11.0 11.2 11.2 11.5 Male 18.6 18.6 18.5 17.4 16.9 17.8 16.0 Female 5.2 6.0 6.3 4.9 5.8 5.0 6.4
  • 11. 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 1948 Rate 1950 1952 1954 1956 1958 1960 1962 1964 1966 1968 1970 1972 1974 1976 1978 Year 1980 1982 1984 1986 1988 1990 1992 1994 1996 1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 Males 2008 Females Suicide age-standardised rates, by sex, 1948-2010 2010
  • 12. Suicide as a percentage of all deaths in that age group 2010 Percent 45 Males Females 40 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 5–9 10–14 15–19 20–24 25–29 30–34 35–39 40–44 45–49 50–54 55–59 60–64 65–69 70–74 75–79 80–84 85+ Five-year age group
  • 13. Suicide age-specific death rates, by 5-year age group, 2010 Rate 60 Males Females 50 40 30 20 10 0 15–19 20–24 25–29 30–34 35–39 40–44 45–49 50–54 55–59 60–64 65–69 70–74 75–79 80–84 85+ Five-year age group
  • 14. Māori and non-Māori suicide rates, by sex 1996-2010 Rate 35 Māori males Māori females 30 Non-Māori males Non-Māori females 25 20 15 10 5 0 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 Year
  • 15. Methods of NZ suicide deaths 2010 Submersion (drowning) 1.5% Firearms and explosives 8.0% Cutting and piercing instrument 1.7% Hanging, strangulation Jumping from high place and suffocation 1.7% 60.5% Other and unspecified means 3.3% Poisoning – liquids and solids 11.9% Poisoning – gases and vapours 11.3%
  • 16. New Zealand Suicide Prevention Strategy http://www.moh.govt.nz/moh.nsf/indexmh/suicidepr evention-strategyandplan#strategy
  • 17. NZ - SUICIDE PREVENTION STRATEGY NZSPS – 7 goals  promote mental health & wellbeing  improve care of people with mental disorders associated with suicidal behaviours  improve care of attempters  reduce access to means of suicide  promote safe reporting & portrayal of suicidal behaviour by the media  provide postvention support  expand evidence about rates, causes & effective interventions.
  • 18. RISK & PROTECTIVE FACTORS 19
  • 19.
  • 20. MICRO-LEVEL RISK FACTORS  Genetic vulnerabilities  Psychiatric illness  Impulsivity  Aggression  Hopelessness  Previous suicide attempts  Poor coping skills  Physical illness/injury, TBI, PTSD  Sexual orientation
  • 21. MICRO-LEVEL PREVENTION STRATEGIES Individual interventions  Psychotherapy, medication, psychosocial support  Diet, exercise  Building coping skills, resiliency (e.g. anger/conflict management), optimism, wellness  Impulsivity/anger management  Cyber, phone, txt msg interventions  Medication, appointment reminders  Tailored safety planning
  • 22. PROTECTIVE FACTORS – HEALTH Micro-level (Individual) activities  Acute distress or crisis  Engage with health services  Keep appointments  Take medications and follow treatments as prescribed  Have a safety plan, & follow it when you encounter difficulties  Ensure you are safe  If things don’t get better, ask for help  Ask for help and support from family, friends, health services  Go to the ED or local Psych Emergency Services  Call helplines - Free 0800 543 354;  If immediate danger - call 111
  • 23. PROTECTIVE FACTORS - PSYCHOLOGICAL Most people exposed to difficult life experiences do not die by suicide. Likely explained by differences in protective factors:  Resilience - ability to cope with, and adjust to adversity  A sense of self-worth and self-efficacy  Effective coping and problem-solving skills  Outward focus (serving others)  Adaptive help-seeking behaviour  Life satisfaction  A positive therapeutic relationship
  • 24. PROTECTIVE FACTORS – HEALTH Micro-level (Individual) activities  Specific daily wellbeing practices  Diet  Keep a gratitude journal  Keep a hope box  Make plans, set challenges for yourself  Volunteer activities – help others  Pets - responsibility/exercise  Ensure social contact  Take up hobbies, exercise, interests
  • 25. PROTECTIVE FACTORS – HEALTH Most people who die by suicide are depressed but not taking effective antidepressants  Many not diagnosed  Of those diagnosed, many are untreated or under-treated  Many more do not take their meds as prescribed. YET  There are effective medications and therapies  Educate primary care (GPs) to assess, treat and manage depressed & suicidal patients  Encourage help-seeking, adherence with treatments & meds
  • 26. PROTECTIVE FACTORS - INDIVIDUAL & SOCIAL  Social connectedness, good relationships with friends, colleagues and neighbours  Social support from other people  Marriage - men; children for women (but cannot prescribe!)  Religious/spiritual beliefs
  • 27. MESO-LEVEL RISK FACTORS  Relationship, legal, financial, disciplinary problems  Physical and emotional abuse, neglect, bullying  Family violence  Parental psychopathology  Unemployment  Social isolation  Academic pressures  Institutional settings (prisons, services, schools)  Clusters and contagion  Healthcare settings (inpatient units)
  • 28. MESO-LEVEL STRATEGIES  Institutional strategies  Education, screening, skills building, gatekeeper support  Psychosocial interventions  Anti-bullying, IPV screening, parenting/family support, crisis lines, social support  Primary care screening, assessment, education  Healthcare settings (EDs, inpatient units)  Community settings  Cluster management, postvention/bereavement support, workplace support
  • 29. MACRO-LEVEL RISK FACTORS  Public laws/policies (e.g. drug & alcohol access)  Season/weather  Disasters (long term)  Media over-reporting  Cyber-exposure; cyber bullying;  Social disintegration, individualism, materialism  Globalisation, macro-economic restructuring  Cultural differences/isolation
  • 30. MACRO-LEVEL STRATEGIES  Community, state, national policy interventions  Means restrictions  Drugs/alcohol policies  Media guidelines  Health & wellness promotion  Social policies & employment  Health literacy, destigmatisation  Public service messages  Media and cyber-based programmes
  • 31. PROTECTIVE FACTORS – MEANS RESTRICTION  Suicidal behaviour is often ambivalent & impulsive, and/or contemplated when someone is intoxicated  May not be pursued if access to a favoured method or a particular site of suicide is thwarted.  Therefore restricting access to means of suicide is a very effective protection against suicide  Shown for domestic gas, VEG, metro railway systems, guns, bridges, jumping sites, medications - prescribed & OTC
  • 32. RE-INSTALLING BARRIERS 33 Grafton Bridge, Auckland, New Zealand  Removal of safety barriers in place 60 yrs led to a 5.6-fold increase in Ss from the bridge – 3 Ss in the 4 years prior to removal, 19 Ss in 5 yrs after removal.  Reinstatement of barriers eliminated Ss from the bridge and appears to have decreased Ss by jumping the city. No increase in Ss by jumping from other sites. Beautrais et al, 2010
  • 33. SUICIDES AT GRAFTON BRIDGE 34 19 3 0 1992-1995 1997-2001 2002-Present
  • 34. STRENGTHENING PROTECTIVE FACTORS & INSTILLING HOPE WINNING WAYS TO WELLBEING
  • 35.
  • 36. ADVANCING SUICIDE PREVENTION INSTILLING HOPE  We now have a sufficient body of evidence and data about risk & protective factors for suicide.  The time to convert that evidence into effective programmes is NOW.  Requires sustained investment in funding, training & development of a suicide research & prevention workforce, and in IT, regulatory & funding infrastructures which support suicide prevention  The present absence of strong evidence for effective programmes is a call for action
  • 37.
  • 38. KEYNOTE SPEAKERS CONFERENCE SPEAKERS Professor Sir Peter Gluckman Professor Jane Pirkis Prime Minister's Science Adviser, New Zealand University of Melbourne, Australia Professor Eric Caine Professor David Fergusson University of Rochester School of Medicine University of Otago, Christchurch New Zealand Rochester, NY, USA Professor G Luke Larkin Paul Kelly The University of Auckland, New Zealand CEO, Console Ireland Assoc. Professor Sally Merry Dr John Crawshaw The University of Auckland, New Zealand Director of Mental Health, Ministry of Health, New Zealand Dr Shyamala Nada-Raja University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand Di Grennell Te Puni Kokiri, New Zealand Dr Jemaima Tiatia Centre for Pacific Studies The University of Auckland, Professor Helen Christensen New Zealand Executive Director, Black Dog Institute, Sydney, & Professor of Mental Health, University of New South Sandra Palmer & Eliza Snelgar, Wales, Australia Community Postvention Response Service (CPRS), CASA, New Zealand Professor Simon Hatcher University of Ottawa, Canada Dr Nik Coupe
  • 39. CONFERENCE TOPICS TOPICS  The science of suicide  New Zealand suicide prevention prevention policy  Suicide clusters  Pacific suicide prevention  e-health and suicide  The Emergency Department prevention as a site for suicide prevention  Suicide as a public health problem  Pathways to suicide  Postvention  Public/private partnerships in suicide prevention  Māori and suicide prevention
  • 40. SUICIDE PREVENTION 2012: IDEAS, INNOVATION, IMPLEMENTATION FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 28TH, 2012 8.30am to 5pm ELLERSLIE EVENT CENTRE www.suicideprevention2012.weebly.com