Clueless Oregon Health Officials
Lament High
Suicide Rate–While State Permits Suicide Facilitation
By Wesley J. Smith
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Wesley J. Smith |
Editor’s note. This appears
today on Wesley’s terrific blog---
http://www.firstthings.com/blogs/secondhandsmoke/2010/09/10/clueless-oregon-health-officials-lament-high-suicide-rate-while-state-permits-suicide-facilitation/
Oregon’s suicide rate is going
through the roof. Government health officials are suitably
alarmed. From the Oregon Health Authority press release [http://www.oregon.gov/DHS/news/2010news/2010-0909a.pdf?ga=t]
Oregon’s suicide rate is 35
percent higher than the national average. The rate is 15.2
suicides per 100,000 people compared to the national rate of
11.3 per 100,000. After decreasing in the 1990s, suicide rates
have been increasing significantly since 2000, according to a
new report, “Suicides in Oregon: Trends and Risk Factors,” from
Oregon Public Health. The report also details recommendations to
prevent the number of suicides in Oregon. “Suicide is one of the
most persistent yet preventable public health problems. It is
the leading cause of death from injuries – more than even from
car crashes. Each year 550 people in Oregon die from suicide and
1,800 people are hospitalized for non-fatal attempts,” said Lisa
Millet, MPH, principal investigator, and manager of the Injury
Prevention and Epidemiology Section, Oregon Public Health.
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That is bad, but these are phony
statistics that under count the actual toll by about 10% since
they don’t include assisted suicides–which have been redefined
legally in Oregon as not suicide. But they are suicides no
matter what they are called and whether or not they are counted
as such by the state. I think that matters.
And note the absence of mention
of assisted suicide in methods for prevention:
The report also contained
recommendations to reduce the number of suicides, including
universal depression screening by health care providers,
particularly for youth, veterans and seniors; expanded
prevention efforts across all ages focusing on men in
particular; complete statewide implementation of comprehensive
suicide prevention in high schools; identification of
appropriate approaches that engage and enable men to identify
depression as a manageable condition; and the promotion of
community, business, family and individual tools to support
successful self management. Also families and individuals should
remove guns from homes when a family member is suicidal. Health
care providers should counsel family members and individuals at
high risk for suicide to remove guns from their homes.
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How about also removing lethal
prescriptions?
Here’s something that should be
looked into by mental health professionals: When a state has a
pro suicide policy for some people, does it becomes harder to
tell other suicidal people that suicide is not the answer? I
don’t see how it wouldn’t.
Maybe one helpful change that
could improve Oregon’s lamentable suicide rate would be for its
leaders to begin speaking out against assisted suicide–even if
it remains legal. That would at least put some consistency into
official efforts at suicide prevention.
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