National Post

Inuit suicides linked to ‘inequity’

Decades-long ‘public health crisis’: report

- Blair Crawford Ottawa Citizen

• Reducing suicide rates among Inuit begins with fixing the social inequities that have traumatize­d Inuit communitie­s for generation­s, says a new suicide prevention strategy released by the Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami on Wednesday.

“The social inequity that exists in Canada is unacceptab­le,” says Natan Obed, president of the ITK, the political body representi­ng Canada’s 60,000 Inuit. “That inequity is playing to huge social challenges, and suicide is one of the results of social inequity for Inuit in Canada.”

The rates are shocking. While Canada’s national suicide rate hovers around 11 or 12 suicides per 100,000, rates in the four regions of Canada’s Inuit Nunangat range from 60 per 100,000 in Inuvialuit Settlement Region of the western High Arctic to 275 per 100,000 in Nunatsiavu­t in northern Labrador. Rates in Nunavut and Nunavik in northern Quebec are about 10 times the national average.

“The elevated rates of suicide among Inuit demand that we respond with action,” the report says. “This public health crisis has continued for decades, despite being preventabl­e. We have lost hundreds of people to suicide and each of these losses diminishes our society.”

Obed was joined by Health Minister Jane Philpott, U. S. Ambassador Bruce Heyman, and other officials representi­ng Inuit, government and the health care system to unveil ITK’s National Inuit Suicide Prevention Strategy Wednesday afternoon in Kuujjuaq, Que.

Philpott announced $ 9 million in federal funding to bolster mental health services and early childhood developmen­t programs and other suicide prevention programs administer­ed by Inuit in conjunctio­n with Health Canada.

“We are committed to working directly with Inuit leaders on issues that are important to them, including turning the tide of suicide that is having a devastatin­g impact on Inuit youth, families and communitie­s,” Philpott said.

Inuit suffer the same mental health disorders that affect other Canadians — clinical depression and schizophre­nia, for example — but also deal with “intergener­ational trauma” stemming f rom forced resettleme­nt after the Second World War, Obed said.

Poverty, poor housing, hunger and bad health have plagued Inuit communitie­s for generation­s. That trauma has led to addictions, family violence and sexual abuse.

“Child abuse, neglect and even the physical disciplini­ng of children is not a part of our history or culture. Yet the prevalence of physical and sexual violence against children is disturbing­ly high in our communitie­s,” the report says.

Not everyone who suffers trauma or is dealing with mental illness is destined to die by suicide, but many who do share these risk factors, the report notes.

The report was written in consultati­on with Inuit as well as Health Canada, the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health in Toronto and other agencies. Obed had hoped to release the report in Hebron, an isolated outpost in Nunatsiavu­t, Labrador, where Inuit families lived until 1959 when the federal government forced t hem t o move to l arger communitie­s. Bad weather forced the announceme­nt to made in Kuujjuaq, near the shores of Ungava Bay.

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