Stress on preventive steps to help stop suicides

16-Jun-2014

BANGALORE : The spate of suicides in the city, including the 10 reported over Friday and Saturday, is a cause of concern. Medical and psychological experts have underlined the need for educational institutions and workplaces to take preventive measures to stop people from committing suicide.

According to a study conducted by the National Institute of Mental Health and Neurosciences (NIMHANS), as against every reported case of suicide, there are at least 10 attempt to commit suicide cases. And, the number of those contemplating suicide is not known.

NIMHANS has, in its study report, termed suicide as a public health issue. The report underlines the need for recognising those with suicidal tendencies the symptoms of which include loss of interest in work or studies, disturbed sleep, and increased inclination to smoke cigarettes and drink alcohol.

Rani Shetty, counsellor at Parihar that runs the helplines at the Police Commissioner’s office, underlined the need to identify why any person has suicidal tendency. “As there are multiple causes of suicides, chalking out one single measure for prevention of suicides is not the solution,” she said. She also said that there was a need for all educational institutes and workplaces to have a full-time counsellor to address the issue.

According to Ms. Rani Shetty, there is a rise in the number of adolescents showing suicidal tendencies. “Many adolescents call the helpline and express their desire to commit suicide over trivial issues,” she added.

According to the Police, 2,033 unnatural deaths were reported in 2013. The number of suicides among these cases is yet to be tallied. As per statistics provided by the National Crime Records Bureau, 1,989 suicide cases were reported in Bangalore in 2012. Also, Bangalore accounted for 10 per cent of the 19,120 suicides reported in 88 cities during the year. This is a 15.8 per cent increase compared to 2011 when the number of suicides stood at 1,717.

The highest number of suicides in 2012 was reported in Chennai (2,183). The four metro cities — Chennai, Bangalore, New Delhi and Mumbai — contribute to about 35 per cent of the number of suicides reported in 88 cities.

Additional Commissioner (Crime) Pronab Mohanty said that it is difficult to attribute the 10 suicides reported over two days to any one reason.

“The incidence of 10 suicides over Friday and Saturday could be just a coincidence and no pattern can be determined when we look at the profiles of the dead persons,” he said.

http://www.thehindu.com/news/cities/bangalore/stress-on-preventive-steps-to-help-stop-suicides/article6117246.ece

Dark As This City

29-Jul-2013

NEHA BHATT

What makes industrious Jabalpur the city with India’s highest suicide rate?

Jeet Sharma, 27 - Under treatment for depression, he now practises meditation

Jeet Sharma, 27
Under treatment for depression, he now practises meditation

JABALPUR : On most days, Jabalpur’s well-known Tilwara bridge, on the route to Nagpur, makes a fetching picture. The Narmada gushes far below, dark hills rise at one end of the bridge, the other end a sea of green that seals from view the grimy city of Jabalpur beyond. But in ‘suicide season’, as locals casually call the months between April and July, when exam results are generally declared, this bridge turns deadly, becoming the city’s preferred ‘khudkhushi point’, tempting scores of young men and women to go over the rails and into the swirling waters below.

This doesn’t raise many eyebrows in Jabalpur anymore, for the phenomenon has been all too routinised. In fact, the National Crime Records Bureau’s suicide statistics reveal a chilling fact: Jabalpur tops the list of Indian cities, with nearly 50 suicides a month and a suicide rate of 45.1 for every 1,000 people in the city, beating 52 other big cities like Bangalore, Chennai, Pune, Delhi and Mumbai. Jabalpur clocked 572 suicides in 2012, up from 351 the year before. Local papers reduce news of daily suicides to single column stories, though recently the local channel, Sahara Samay MP, aired an hour-long special feature on the depressing trend, titled ‘Jabalpur: Suicide Capital’. “The local media haven’t fully caught on to the gravity of the situation. There are hardly any discussions on the problem, not even among NGOs,” says Harpreet Kaur, who produced the show. But what makes Jabalpur such a grim city to live in? Amit Mishra, 17, a student in a private school who tried to commit suicide early this month, has a ready answer: “This is not a city that can support my dreams and my parents don’t understand that. I failed my Class XII this year and father wants me to pursue engineering when all I want is to go to Mumbai and try my luck as an actor,” says the young man, lying in the ICU at the city’s National Hospital, where several beds are reserved under the ‘poison unit’, meant for treating an overwhelming number of residents who consume poison to try to end it all.

amit_mishra_20130729.jpg

Amit Mishra, 17, Jabalpur wouldn’t support his dreams, so he took naphthalene balls. ( Photograph by Jitender Gupta)

Amit swallowed naphthalene balls on the night of July 1 and and was brought to the hospital by his parents the next day. In an eerie reality TV-like dramatisation of his deathwish, he tells us about a suicide note he has composed, noting that his case should be featured on Crime Patrol, a TV show. He pulls out his wallet and points to two photos, one showing a dusky, shy-looking boy, the other the grown-up, better-­groomed version. “Can you believe this? So dark-skinned and mousy. Look at how I have worked on myself. I have high aspirations, I want expensive phones, a job in the movies, I just need my parents to let me go.”

His father steps in to inquire after his health, but the young boy won’t talk to him. Outside, the father, Satyendra Mishra, is in tears: “I’m just a worried father. What did I do wrong? I have a job in a clothing company, but I’ve tried to give him all he ever wanted. In return, I ask him to focus, not be wayward. But I guess we failed to understand him.”

Across from Amit’s bed twentysomething Meena Kumar lies unconscious. She is in a critical condition. Her husband Naren, a pharmacist, claims she swallowed four unknown antibiotics “by mistake”. A few beds down, Dhiren Singh, 28, who consumed Celphos pesticide the day before, writhes in pain and is delirious. He is watched over by his brother, whom doctors have told that Dhiren won’t survive the day. Asked why he took the drastic step, his brother Viru shrugs, saying he may have been unhappy as he didn’t have a regular job, but couldn’t be sure as they weren’t close enough.

Meena Kumar, 20+, Reason unknown, but she tried to kill herself by swallowing “medicines”. ( Photograph by Jitender Gupta)

Meena Kumar, 20+, Reason unknown, but she tried to kill herself by swallowing “medicines”. ( Photograph by Jitender Gupta)

Jabalpur, the army nerve-centre of Madhya Pradesh, could well resemble any other Indian small town in the midst of a badly managed transition. As a chaotic traffic system gives way to a regularised bus service, single screen halls make way for multiplexes, local markets compete with the new ‘Big Bazaar’ mall in town, old and new mindsets battle it out. But below the surface, the city hasn’t kept up with the pace of its people, those with big city aspirations. “People are taking extreme measures here at the drop of a hat, and one of the reasons could be the breakdown of the joint family. Petty domestic quarrels become bigger because you have no one to sort things out. Plus, the working population here is solely dependent on government jobs, such as those at the Gun Carriage Factory, Vehicle Factory or Indian Ordnance Factory, with few industries and hardly any avenues in the private sector,” says Harinarayanachari Mishra, SP for the district. “Who knows, but reading about suicides everyday in the newspapers could be setting off a chain reaction, becoming the obvious response to any problem, big or small.”

A large chunk of the suicide victims are students and young housewives, according to police figures. Dr Hema Sahu, one of the few clinical psychologists in the city, says, “Most of my patients are aged 16-30, as this is the stage when you want the whole world with as little effort as possible. I regularly have newly-married women whose expectations from marriage are different from what it is in reality, students who feel isolated in this city, kids who cannot communicate with their parents. I’m not surprised I have three times the number of patients coming to me than two years ago, because the opportunities here are sorely missing and dissatisfaction levels are so high.”

***

Worry Not, This Fan Is Suicide-Proof
Dr R.S. Sharma’s invention can save on-the-brink lives

The doctor’s assistant demonstrates. The noose is around his neck. He hops off the supporting stool, but with any load more than 25 kilos... the spring-loaded suspension gives way. At worst, he’ll be hurt by the fall.
The doctor’s assistant demonstrates. The noose is around his neck. He hops off the supporting stool, but with any load more than 25 kilos… ..the spring-loaded suspension gives way. At worst, he’ll be hurt by the fall.

***

Dr R.S. Sharma, a cardiologist who is well-regarded in town, says, “If Jabalpur’s residents are not inspired to realign their mindsets, at least let’s make it tougher for them to take their own lives.” Sharma has invented a “suicide-proof fan”, struck by the spate of death-by-hanging cases, especially by hostellers. Sharma’s assistant uses a stool and a sample fan to demonstrate. It’s a simple device, really, where the springs give if anything heavier than 25 kilos is hung from the fan. “It costs just Rs 450-600 more than a regular fan and the idea was that, just as there is a safety device in every machine, why not have one in a fan, which is one of the most common methods of suicide here,” says Sharma, who has filed for a patent and received an order for 1,000 pieces from the Union ministry of science and technology.

Gynaecologist Pushpa Pande, who also counsels in her free time, prefers attacking the root cause, which she elaborates as rising self-esteem issues in an “inferior city”. Jabalpur is a city in deep conflict, she says, much more than other metros. “Youngsters want to explore a more experimental life, but the older generation hasn’t welcomed change. TV is probably the only source of entertainment here, encouraging artificial expectations, which leads to widespread depression when those expectations are not met,” explains Pande, who hosts a batch of medical students every morning in the meditation hall at her home to deal with stress.

One of her patients, 27-year-old Jeet Sharma, under medication for chronic depression, continues to struggle with “small-town boy” image issues. “I used to see my Facebook friends put up posts about travelling all over the world and I used to ask myself, why not me?” Jeet asks. While Jabalpur may be a tier-2 city on paper, it feels far from one.

Despite a few well-intentioned interventions, Jabalpur grapples with bigger issues at the moment. In the narrow, busy lanes of the city’s Saraafa Bazaar, where Hitendra Srivastava lives in a modest two-storey house, the lack of good medical care continues to haunt the 35-year-old government school teacher. He lost his younger brother, Tijendra, in March this year. He had hung himself from the ceiling fan in his bedroom. Hitendra seats himself on a plastic chair from where he can look out the main door on to the street. “This is where my brother liked to sit the entire day, not saying much. He was diagnosed with schizophrenia in 2006, and I used to take him to the Institute of Mental Health in Agra every month for checkups. If we had better access to medical facilities right here in Jabalpur, he could have been saved.”

The city, about 300 km from the state capital Bhopal, has touristic potential in Bedaghat, the site famous for marble rocks that rise dramatically on either side of the Narmada, the picturesque Dhuandhar falls, and a few important temples. The city also serves as the nerve-centre of many bus and railway lines, with a tiny airport offering daily flights to Delhi and Mumbai. But the joke here goes that only outbound trains and flights go full as everyone only wants to flee.

Yet, not everyone is convinced that there is anything particularly amiss in Jabalpur. Rakesh Singh, BJP mp from the city, says he was surprised to learn about its suicide figures. “There has been a lot of development here in the last 7-8 years, in terms of connectivity, growth, education. Perhaps societal changes are the reason.” Indeed, despite its somewhat lethargic functioning, Jabalpur is something of an education hub in Madhya Pradesh, third in line after Bhopal and Indore, with a number of engineering and medical institutions. With a high student population from smaller districts of Madhya Pradesh and neighbouring states, there is clearly a rising sense of youth disillusionment. Geeta Gupta, a 26-year-old medical student from Rajasthan, has lived in Jabalpur for the last eight years and studies at N.S.C.B. Medical College, located on the outskirts. But increasing pressure at college and no emotional outlet-either in the form of counselling or an ambience of downtime­-has led to deep depression. Geeta fights suicidal thoughts, confiding in nobody. “When I was interning last year, I’d come across 4-5 cases of attempted suicide daily. That shook me up, helped me get a perspective, and seek help. I didn’t want to end up like that,” she says.

Dr O.P. Raichandani, a psychiatrist, admits Jabalpur is terribly low on medical resources to deal with the rising number of patients. “Awareness of psychiatry and psychotherapy is low, helplines are few, there are no full-time psychiatric wards. All this could build up to such a high suicide rate, but it’s also possible the rate of suicide reporting is higher than other cities,” he says.

What little counselling facilities the town has are rather arbitrary, with hardly any follow-ups; psychologists often don’t even keep records of patients who consult them. “Jabalpur has what you could call an inferiority complex. Compared to Indore and Bhopal, cities that are better planned, Jabalpur is a society in turmoil,” says Gyan Prakash, a social science professor at Devi Ahilya Vishwavidyalaya, Indore. What is also missing, adds Mishra, the SP, is a sense of public outrage. “As a society, we are not reacting strongly enough. At the police end, we are planning a seminar on suicides with the help of the Jabalpur Foundation,” he says. “Through the initiative, we will encourage students to communicate, and schools and colleges to keep counsellors close at hand.”

Meanwhile, Jabalpur could do well to remember these immortal lines by Dorothy Parker:

Razors pain you,
Rivers are damp,
Acids stain you,
And drugs cause cramp.
Guns aren’t lawful,
Nooses give,
Gas smells awful,
You might as well live.


(Names of patients have been changed)

***

Cities With The Highest Suicide Rates

  • Jabalpur 45.1
  • Kollam 40.5
  • Rajkot 30.5

(Annual figures of suicides per 1,000 people living in the city or town.)

***

Top Causes Of Suicide*

  • Domestic quarrels
  • Mental/physical illness
  • Censure
  • Affairs gone wrong
  • Failure in exams
  • Substance abuse

***

Top Modes Of Suicide

  • Hanging
  • Poisoning
  • Self-immolation
  • Drowning
  • Lying on railway tracks

Source: Latest National Crime Records Bureau, Jabalpur police stats

http://www.outlookindia.com/printarticle.aspx?286998

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Suicide rate among employed higher than jobless: NCRB report

1-Jul-2013

Rashi Aditi Ghosh

NEW DELHI : As per the latest National Crime Records Bureau-2012 (NCRB) report, jobless men and women are less likely to commit suicide than their salaried and self-employed counterparts.

A Zee Research Group analysis of the NCRB report reveals that the suicide rate amongst employed people is higher compared to housewives, service professionals, students, retired and unemployed persons.

While 38.7 per cent of self employed people committed suicides in 2012, 7.4 per cent unemployed people took the extreme step to end their lives in 2012.

Similarly, while 12.5 per cent people in service committed suicide in 2012, the figure stands at 0.7 per cent for retired people in 2012. Private sector employees in service category and farmers within the self employed section recorded highest suicidal deaths during 2012.

As matter of fact, suicidal deaths within the service and self employment category was recorded highest within people belonging to 30-44 years of age group. This supposedly indicates higher competition in the employment sector for middle aged persons.

While 14 per cent self employed people within the 30-44 years of age group committed suicide in 2012, five per cent people in service killed themselves in 2012. Reasoning excessive pressure and competition in the job market for increasing number of suicides amongst employed people, Ripan Sippy, a clinical psychologist from Delhi said, “Office politics, hectic lifestyle, professional competitions and increasing standard of living are giving rise to social isolation amongst employed people in India. When you lack social bonds and leisure your mental imbalance forces you to kill yourself and end all the complications from your life.”

NCRB further reveals that more men in comparison to women in all the above mentioned categories have ended their lives during 2012. Giving a scientific reason for the rising number of male suicides, Dr Sameer Malhotra, the head of mental health department at Max Hospital (Delhi) said, “Lifestyle pressures, exacerbated by financial inadequacies, force men to commit suicide.”

The disparity within men and women in suicidal deaths was found highest in self -employment category. While 50 per cent self employed men killed themselves in 2012, just 16.7 per cent self employed women killed themselves in 2012.

Reasons Dr Malhotra at Max (Delhi), “Men lack social support and thus can’t vent their feelings. It’s true that the level of depression in men may be lesser than women, but isolation and loneliness in men leads them to opt for lethal ways for a solution in comparison to women.”

However, the number of suicides in all the above mentioned categories (excluding self employed and retired ones ) have registered a fall in 2012 over the previous year.

http://www.dnaindia.com/india/1855718/report-suicide-rate-among-employed-higher-than-jobless-ncrb-report

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