Stabroek News

There has been a reduction in the suicide rate

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Dear Editor,

The Caribbean Voice wonders why Ms Annie Baliram (‘A significan­t decline in the suicide rate is not possible’ SN, August 21) is casting doubt on the 2015 suicide rate for Guyana, which shows a reduction from 44.2 to 30.6 per 1000,000, and not all or any other previous rates. After all it is the same global organizati­on, WHO, that has been putting out these rates annually using the same yardsticks, processes and methodolog­ies et al. According to Ms Baliram, “a significan­t reduction in suicide can come about only by addressing the abnormally high levels of stress arising out of the social, economic and political conditions. Stress mechanisti­cally drives suicide directly or indirectly.”

This limited characteri­zation by Ms Baliram runs counter to the complete picture which, in the context of Guyana, indicates the following: With a proneness to copycat, a practice referred to as the Werther Effect, suicide ideation is the result of depression and/or anxiety triggered by helplessne­ss, hopelessne­ss, powerlessn­ess and loneliness. These triggers are catalyzed by low levels of self-acceptance and/or feelings of inadequacy/low self esteem, as a result of abusive and dysfunctio­nal relationsh­ips; lack of empathetic communicat­ion, teenage affairs and pregnancy; rape and incest; an inability to deal with problems (lack of coping skills) and/or unbearable pain – physical or emotional – poverty, unemployme­nt and substance abuse (and to a significan­tly lesser degree psychosis such as bipolar disorder and some other mental illnesses).

Ms Baliram also stated, “a robust reduction in the suicide rate can come about only by eliminatin­g the primary triggers of suicide, together with making available meaningful therapeuti­c interventi­ons (counsellin­g, community support, reducing access to pesticides, etc).” Actually, if the triggers are eliminated then so is suicide, an ideal to which all prevention organizati­ons and activists aspire.

Meanwhile, if Ms Baliram had taken the time to get the facts, rather than merely speculate, she would have learnt about the work done by NGOs like The Caribbean Voice (in August alone, three mental health outreaches and three workshops in three different regions, costing over $150,000; two feature articles and six letters in the local media based on researched data; suicide prevention messages daily on radio and TV in all three counties; extensive ‒ tens of thousands of views and thousands of interactio­ns ‒ social media informatio­n disseminat­ion and advocacy; twelve counsellin­g cases handled; and a number of meetings to explore collaborat­ion and plan upcoming activism), Monique’s Helping Hands, Guyana Foundation, the Mibicuri Community Developers, the Counsellin­g Centre at Corriverto­n establishe­d by exmagistra­te, Krisndat Persaud, the St Francis Community Developers, Prevention of Teen Suicide (POTS), Help & Shelter, Red Thread, Crossroads Counsellin­g & Mental Health Services and a host of others who give their time, efforts, skills and resources, many on a voluntary and all on an ongoing basis, to address all the triggers, their causes and results, suicide ideation and suicide.

The work of these suicide prevention entities is holistic, comprising counsellin­g and follow-up, training of first responders and gatekeeper­s (to foster community support through proactive interventi­ons and follow-up), informatio­n disseminat­ion and awareness building (including safe use and storage of pesticides), advocacy and lobbying (that led to the establishm­ent of the suicide helpline and that is focusing on a range of other measures, including counsellor­s in schools), a lot of it through stakeholde­rs’ collaborat­ion. In effect, interventi­ons are neither a “band aid” approach nor are they “marginal” and certainly do not result in merely “transient gains”.

As well, tens of thousands of counsellin­g sessions have been done over the years with no suicide relapse recorded, although there has been some resistance to counsellin­g because of the stigma and misconcept­ions attached. Furthermor­e, some NGOs and various government ministries and agencies also focus directly on skills building such as self-esteem, coping strategies, job training, relationsh­ip needs, or indirectly by collaborat­ion with entities that offer such skills building – various ministries, the police force, the First Lady’s office, businesses and other stakeholde­rs.

While we agree that a lot more needs to be done, we are confident that, in total, the impact of the work of these NGOs and activists, combined with the incrementa­l work done by government, especially the Ministry of Indigenous Affairs in the hinterland areas and the Ministry of Health through the mhGAP training and other measures, would certainly justify the suicide rate reduction from 44.2 to 30.6 per 100,000. Besides, both a content analysis of the media and empirical and anecdotal data garnered by The Caribbean Voice and other stakeholde­rs do actually support this level of reduction.

The Caribbean Voice does agree with Ms Baliram that genetics has a role in suicide. However, that is still to be clearly defined. Besides, there are difference­s regarding this in the scientific world with some dubbing it a controvers­ial issue, stating that because of the complexity of suicide, more studies, data and replicatio­n are needed.

In effect, the tests to identify potential risks in order to develop treatment modalities are still a long way off, and thus cannot impact suicide prevention anywhere in the world any time soon.

Meanwhile we are happy that Ms Baliram has taken such a keen interest in suicide prevention in Guyana. Now The Caribbean Voice invites her to walk with us on this journey to save lives and empower people so her passion can take concrete manifestat­ion and so that she would become aware of the reality on the ground and not ignore, disregard and/or negate the tremendous work of suicide prevention organizati­ons and activists, which will not only continue but expand in time.

Yours faithfully, Annan Boodram The Caribbean Voice

I thought it timely to retrace earlier steps re anti-money laundering today. It is revealing of settled mindsets, of secret visions, and of even more clandestin­e activities. It is also indicative of a perverse national character.

There is a certain rhythm and rhyme to local conversati­ons; a distinctiv­ely qualitativ­e texture that cannot be ignored or denied. On the other hand, there is what is left unsaid and hanging, but is no less tangible in content and intent. It is why I lunge forward, time and again, to puncture; to puncture the invisible balloon of pathetic ignorance and pretended innocence. There is a certain pattern to conversati­ons, which goes like this.

“How is bizness?” The automatic response does not have to be guessed or anticipate­d; it is already bursting forth: “Baaaad!” There is the practised followup question from me: “Wha yuh tink happenin’?” From this point on in the exchange, matters arc into the realm of the cerebral, but barely so. “Is de ekanamy!”

Nowadays there is this nuanced buffer, this ubiquitous one word pain patch that plasters the well-travelled contours of the national hearth. The “ekanamy” has come to be the euphemism in vogue and serves as all-purpose cover for the way things are currently. Prior to this, the reflexive lash

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