The rate of suicide among young men in Ireland is one of the highest in Europe, according to a new all-Ireland study.
The Young Men and Suicide project
found that, over the past decade, the rate of deaths from suicide has
been five times higher in males than in females in Ireland.
It
is estimated that 165 teenagers and young men took their own lives in
Ireland in 2011, while 72 teenagers and young men took their own lives
in the North.
Although the rate of male suicide in Ireland is
relatively low within the EU overall, the rate among young males is
among the highest in the EU.
The jointly funded cross-border
report said the recent spike in suicide rates in both Ireland and the
North coincides with the economic downturn, increasing levels of
unemployment, and alcohol consumption.
Hanging was found to be
the most frequent method of suicide, particularly among young men. The
report also found that deliberate self-harm, traditionally more common
in females, was now higher among young males than young females.
Noel Richardson, lead author of the report, said there was a public
and moral requirement for action on the issue of suicide on the island
of Ireland.
“There can be no quick-fix solutions to tackling
the very grave statistics on suicide in young men on the island of
Ireland,” said Dr Richardson. “But neither is there any place for
inertia or ambivalence. There is both a public health and a moral
requirement to act.”
Dr Richardson said there needs to be “a
concerted effort to engage more effectively and in a more sustained way
with young men, and to plan services and programmes with young men in
mind”. He said the report provided a “blueprint and a roadmap” for
action.
The report found that the factors most consistently
associated with the rise in young male suicide are income inequality,
family relationship difficulties, peer relationship problems, school
failure, low self-esteem, and violence.
Some of the suicide
prevention methods highlighted as being effective in reducing suicide
rates include physician education in depression recognition and
treatment, and restricting access to lethal methods of suicide.
The restriction of items such as firearms, pesticides, domestic gas,
sale of barbiturates, analgesic painkillers; mandatory use of catalytic
converters; construction of barriers at jump sites; and lower toxicity
anti-depressants have been found to be effective in reducing suicide
rates.
Alcohol Action Ireland called for minimum pricing and
other recommendations to reduce alcohol-related harm to be implemented
in full.
Sinn Féin’s spokesman on health and children,
Caoimhghín Ó Caoláin, said the figures for suicide on the island of
Ireland were “truly shocking” and called for a determined and
co-ordinated response from governments on both sides of the border.