By: paho.org
The new initiative will address key challenges that hinder progress in suicide prevention, including limited access to community-based mental health services, stigma, and weak coordination across sectors. Its approach is aligned with the World Health Organizations core interventions, which include:
- Restricting access to the means of suicide
- Promoting responsible media reporting
- Fostering socio-emotional skills in adolescents
- Ensuring early identification, treatment, and follow-up for people at risk
PAHO will focus on three priority areas:
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- Strengthening national plans – Supporting countries to design or update national suicide prevention strategies and action plans tailored to the needs of at-risk populations.
- Expanding access to quality mental health care – Training health workers and communities to identify and support at-risk individuals, and respond effectively, while providing resources for families affected by suicide or self-harm.
- Raising awareness and reducing stigma – Collaborating with media professionals on responsible reporting and implementing campaigns to break the silence around mental health.
Suicide in the Americas: key findings
Suicide disproportionately affects older adults, with 71% of male and 65% of female suicides occurring among those over 50. While men face higher rates (14.7 per 100,000 population, compared to 4 per 100,000), the rate among women has increased more sharply (23% since 2000, compared to 14.4% among men). Suicide attempts were also nearly five times more frequent among women.Several underlying factors appear to be driving these increases. Among men, suicide is closely linked to alcohol and drug use, as well as unemployment and living in areas with high homicide rates. For women, educational inequality and unemployment are the strongest associated factors.“This crisis demands action beyond health systems,” said Renato Oliveira e Souza, Chief of the Mental Health and Substance Use Unit at PAHO. “It requires collaboration across society to elaborate and implement national suicide prevention strategies that can be effective in reducing suicide mortality.”Attend the launch of the Initiative
On 11 September , PAHO will host a virtual event for the launch of the Regional Suicide Prevention Initiative. The event will feature a presentation on the current situation of suicide in the Region of the Americas, as well as the main elements of the new initiative, and will provide a space for the exchange of best practices, challenges, and lessons learned in national suicide prevention initiatives. Register on PAHO´s website to attend the launch.Join the webinar: Shaping responsible communications to raise awareness
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On 18 September, PAHO and the University of Toronto will host the webinar “Shaping responsible communications to raise awareness on suicide prevention in the Americas”. The event will focus on the role of the importance of culturally informed, stigma-reducing awareness campaigns, as well as how social media can be harnessed to promote suicide prevention, while addressing the risks of harmful content and misinformation. Register on PAHO’s website to join experts and learn actionable strategies.
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