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Five Reasons Why Suicide Prevention Programs Are Ineffective

Five Reasons Why Suicide Prevention Programs Are Ineffective Angus H Thompson Alberta Centre for Injury Control & Research & the Department of Public Health Sciences University of Alberta Canadian Association for Suicide Prevention Edmonton October 2004.

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Five Reasons Why Suicide Prevention Programs Are Ineffective

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  1. Five Reasons Why Suicide Prevention Programs Are Ineffective Angus H ThompsonAlberta Centre for Injury Control & Research& the Department of Public Health Sciences University of Alberta Canadian Association for Suicide Prevention Edmonton October 2004

  2. “EFFECTIVE” SUICIDE PREVENTION • Educating Physicians in Detection & Intervention (Gotland, Sweden) • Gun Control (Canada) • Individual Interventions

  3. REASON 1 AN ORGANIZATION WITH “SUICIDE” IN ITS TITLE CANNOT PREVENT SUICIDE!

  4. WHY DOES EARLY INTERVENTIONMATTER? • To Make A Difference During the Formative Years

  5. AGE OF OCCURRENCE OF A NUMBER OF FACTORS RELEVANT TO SUICIDE Brain Sculpting Formal Suicide Intervention Temperament Vocabulary Birth 5 Yrs 10 Yrs 15 Yrs 20 Yrs 25 Yrs Peer Influences Understands Suicide Suicide Ideation

  6. WHY DOES EARLY INTERVENTIONMATTER? • To Make A Difference During the Formative Years • Canadian Children Are More Stressed Than Children From Many Other Countries

  7. RANKINGS OF CANADIAN 11-13 YEAR-OLDS ON SELECTED HEALTH-RELATED QUESTIONS (VS 7-11 COUNTRIES)

  8. WHY DOES EARLY INTERVENTIONMATTER? • To Make A Difference During the Formative Years • Canadian Children Are More Stressed Than Children From Many Other Countries • Childhood Stress is Increasing in Canada

  9. Figure 3 THE PREVALENCE OF TWO OR MORE TRAUMATIC CHILDHOOD EVENTS BY “COHORT YEAR” AND SEX “Cohort Year” = Date when the youngest person in each group would have been about 15 years of age Source: Thompson AH, Cui X (2000). Increasing Childhood Trauma in Canada: Findings From the National Population Health Survey, 1994/95. Canadian Journal of Public Health, 91(3), 197-200.

  10. REASON 2 SUICIDE IS NOT SEEN AS PART OF A CLUSTER OF HUMAN PROBLEMS

  11. THE CANADIAN SOCIAL PROBLEM INDEX COMPONENTS Murder Attempted Murder Assault Sexual assault Robbery Suicide Divorce Alcoholism Source: Thompson AH, Howard AW, Yin J (2001). A social problem index for Canada. Canadian Journal of Psychiatry 46, 45-51.

  12. THE CANADIAN SOCIAL PROBLEM INDEX: 1956 - 1996 Source: Thompson AH, Howard AW, Jin Y (2001). A social problem index for Canada. Canadian Journal of Psychiatry 46, 45-51.

  13. THE ASSOCIATION BETWEEN SOCIAL PROBLEMS AND PSYCHIATRIC DIAGNOSES IN THE EDMONTON AREA EPIDEMIOLOGICAL STUDY OF PSYCHIATRIC DISORDERS Source: Thompson A & Bland RC (1995). Social dysfunction and mental illness in a community sample. Canadian Journal of Psychiatry 40, 15 – 20.

  14. (r = 0.81)

  15. REASON 3 THE MAJORITY OF SUICIDAL INDIVIDUALS EXHIBIT A MENTAL ILLNESS, BUT MOST OF THESE DO NOT RECEIVE TREATMENT

  16. The Proportion Of Persons Who Had Completed Suicide Who Showed Evidence Of A Mental Illness Depressive Any Authors Country Disorders Disorder Robins et al. 1959 USA 45% 94% Dorpat & Ripley 1960 USA 29% 100% Barraclough et al. 1974 UK 70% 93% Beskow 1979 Swe 45-48% 97% Chynoweth et al. 1980 Aust 55% 88% Rich et al. 1986 USA 46% 95% Arato et al. 1988 Hung 58% 81% Åsgård 1990 Swe 58% 95% Henriksson et al. 1993 Finl 59% 93% Cheng 1995 Taiw 88% 98% Conwell et al. 1996 USA 47% 90% Foster et al. 1997 N Ire 36% 86%

  17. BUT … • Psychological autopsies are retrospective in nature

  18. BUT … • Psychological autopsies are retrospective in nature • Treatment is far from perfect

  19. BUT … • Psychological autopsies are retrospective in nature • Treatment is far from perfect • There is an environment by mental vulnerability interactioni.e.

  20. EXPRESSION OF SOCIAL PROBLEM BEHAVIOURA Threshold Model High Stress Social Problem Behaviour Stress Threshold No Social Problem Behaviour Low Stress

  21. EXPRESSION OF SOCIAL PROBLEM BEHAVIOURTwo Components 1. ENVIRONMENTAL STRESSORS 2. INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES IN REACTIVITY

  22. THE INTERACTION OF CONSTITUTIONAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS: A MODEL The Disabled The Vulnerable SOCIAL PROBLEMS The Resilient NO SOCIAL PROBLEMS The Invulnerable Social Disintegration

  23. THE INTERACTION OF CONSTITUTIONAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS: A MODEL The Disabled The Vulnerable SOCIAL PROBLEMS The Resilient NO SOCIAL PROBLEMS The Invulnerable Social Disintegration

  24. THE INTERACTION OF CONSTITUTIONAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS: A MODEL The Disabled The Vulnerable SOCIAL PROBLEMS The Resilient NO SOCIAL PROBLEMS The Invulnerable Social Disintegration

  25. REASON 4 SUICIDE PREVENTION PROGRAMS CANNOT “LEARN”

  26. “SUICIDE PREVENTION” PROGRAMS RARELY EVALUATE THEIR IMPACTS: • Several years required to show an effect

  27. “SUICIDE PREVENTION” PROGRAMS RARELY EVALUATE THEIR IMPACTS: • Several years required to show an effect • Avoidance of personal evaluation

  28. “SUICIDE PREVENTION” PROGRAMS RARELY EVALUATE THEIR IMPACTS: • Several years required to show an effect • Avoidance of personal evaluation • Not knowing what one’s job is(i.e. focus on process, not outcome)

  29. REASON 5 WE DON’T KNOW WHY THE SUICIDE RATE IS SO LOW

  30. If depression and hopelessness are considered to be essential components of suicide, and considering that: • We all will die • We will lose loved ones • Most won’t be in the career of choice • Our abilities will decline as we age • Then, why is the suicide rate not higher - in fact, much higher - than it is?

  31. WHY DO WE “GO FORWARD”?

  32. WHY DO WE “GO FORWARD”?

  33. Strengthening Behaviour (Skinner) • Control over one's environment • Optimism (Seligman) • The family • Traditions (Frankl) • Social skills • Social Support • Rose Coloured Glasses

  34. WHAT TO DO

  35. WHAT TO DO AN ORGANIZATION WITH “SUICIDE” IN ITS TITLE CANNOT PREVENT SUICIDE! Focus on Early Intervention & Child Development prior to the onset of serious suicidal behaviour

  36. WHAT TO DO SUICIDE IS NOT SEEN AS PART OF A CLUSTER OF HUMAN PROBLEMS Create a continuity of services that reflects the inter-relatedness of suicide & other social problems Create a social fabric that weakens the determinants of suicide and enhances resilience and social cohesion

  37. WHAT TO DO MOST SUICIDAL INDIVIDUALS EXHIBIT A MENTAL ILLNESS, BUT THE MAJORITY DO NOT RECEIVE TREATMENT Improve detection, referral and access to treatment for those with a mental illness

  38. WHAT TO DO SUICIDE PREVENTION PROGRAMS CANNOT “LEARN” Create Self-Regulating Suicide Prevention Initiatives, most of which would not have “suicide” in the title

  39. WHAT TO DO WE DON’T KNOW WHY THE SUICIDE RATE IS SO LOW Ensure that every child has experience with success and defer experiences with the traumatic realities of the World - until it is too late!

  40. FIN

  41. Questions arising: • How will we know if prevention programs are effective? • Why do we have separate programs for each definable social problem? Can/should we change this? How? • How is suicide similar to other social problems?How is it different? • How can we integrate suicide prevention with other intervention programs? • Why do so many social/health programs persist without evidence of effectiveness? • Do treatment programs reach the people that need them? • How can we integrate suicide prevention with other intervention programs?

  42. DETERMINANTS • Depression • Hopelessness • Marginalization • Competitive Disadvantage • Childhood Trauma • Development of Confidence

  43. Overview • There is little evidence that Suicide Prevention Programs work. • Five reasons Why they don’t • Most “suicide prevention” interventions are provided after the onset of suicidal behaviour & after the formative years • Suicide is treated outside of its social and personal context • The majority of suicidal people show evidence of a mental illness, but only a minority receive treatment • Suicide prevention programs have difficulty learning from their successes and failures • Perhaps we don’t know why people like living. If we do know we rarely apply it in suicide prevention programs.

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