Cape Breton Post

Psychiatri­st calls for new suicide prevention strategy

Alarming rise in suicide rates in N.S.

- BY JOHN MCPHEE SALTWIRE NETWORK

Dr. Simon Sherry says Nova Scotia has to get serious about suicide prevention.

“We need real actions with real funds and real deadlines,” the Halifax clinical psychiatri­st said in an interview Friday. “Now we have a largely uncoordina­ted approach, we have an out-ofdate approach. When you go to the province’s suicide prevention website, there are seven links, three of them are broken and inoperable.”

In a news release last week ahead of Suicide Prevention Day on Monday, Sherry issued a call for a new suicide prevention strategy in Nova Scotia. It was sparked by his experience­s as a mental health care provider in Nova Scotia and an alarming rise in suicides in the province in recent years.

According to Statistics Canada, there were 134 suicides in Nova Scotia in 2016, an increase of 44 per cent compared to 2000 when there were 75 deaths.

“Between the years of 2000 and 2012, Nova Scotia’s suicide rate increased more than any other province in Canada,” Sherry said. “Over that time period, we went from being a province that in comparison to the national average, had a below-average suicide rate, to a province that now in comparison to the national average has an above-average suicide rate.

“Why? Part of any provincial suicide prevention strategy should be very careful surveillan­ce of the population. We should be tracking and understand­ing the trends within our population when it comes to suicide. We do not have a nuanced understand­ing of what’s driving these increases.”

Nova Scotia’s suicide prevention strategy, based on research done in 2004, is badly outdated, he said, pointing to Quebec, which dedicates $700,000 per year to suicide prevention, as an example of how government action can make a difference.

“In 1998, they had an alarmingly high suicide rate, much higher than any other province in Canada, and they started putting specific funds to accomplish specific tasks by specific deadlines into a suicide prevention program,” Sherry said. “They dropped their suicide rate by 30 per cent overall and most impressive­ly by 50 per cent in youth.”

Quebec followed World Health Organizati­on protocols to provide education, train additional profession­als and make a public commitment to reduce suicide, said Sherry, who’s also a professor in the department of psychology and neuroscien­ce at Dalhousie University.

Suicide prevention advocate Laurel Walker said Sherry is “right on the money” about the need for better funding and improved access to services.

Walker has struggled with depression and anxiety since she was a teenager. She had to leave the province to receive treatment for acute stress disorder, which was sparked by the suicide of a woman she was helping as a mental health peer counsellor in 2012.

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