Waterloo Region Record

Bridge barriers reduced suicides: study

- Michelle McQuigge

TORONTO — A new study suggests a barrier erected on a Toronto overpass that was once the second-most frequented bridge for suicides in North America is serving its purpose.

The study from Sunnybrook Hospital, published in the journal BMJ Open on Tuesday, compares the 11-year periods before and after the barrier went up on the city’s Bloor Street Viaduct.

Researcher­s say an average of nine people a year had been dying by jumping from the bridge before 2003, placing it behind only San Francisco’s Golden Gate Bridge for suicides-by-jumping.

Since the barrier was put in place, however, the study found only one person has died by suicide at the site, a 485-metre overpass that spans a multilane highway, ravine and another major roadway.

A previous report that examined data up to 2007 suggested suicide traffic had relocated to other nearby bridges, but the latest research suggests suicide rates across the city dropped over the long term after the barrier went up.

One of the study’s authors says the latest data is in line with other internatio­nal research suggesting that barriers in key locations are effective.

“The barrier did have its intended effect,” study coauthor Dr. Mark Sinyor of Sunnybrook said in a telephone interview. “There was a decrease in deaths by jumping from bridges in Toronto by roughly the same number as the number that had previously been dying at the Bloor Viaduct, without an increase by other methods or locations.”

Sinyor said similar research has found the number of suicides-by-jumping at dozens of other sites with barriers in place have decreased noticeably.

At Edmonton’s High Level Bridge, for example, city statistics indicate the number of both suicides and general mental-health calls was cut in half a year after barriers were installed in 2015.

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