Jamaica Gleaner

EXTREMELY disturbing!

Little support available for teens with suicidal thoughts

- Ryon Jones Staff Reporter ryon.jones@gleanerjm.com

WITH HALF of the wards of the State surveyed in two of the country’s residentia­l childcare facilities admitting to having considered committing suicide in the past, there are renewed calls for more attention to be given to adolescent mental health.

The 2015 Child Health and Wellness Study in Residentia­l Childcare Facilities, which was commission­ed by the Child Developmen­t Agency (CDA) in collaborat­ion with the National Family Planning Board (NFPB), through funding from the United Nation Children’s Fund (UNICEF), found that 40 per cent of the 63 girls surveyed had attempted suicide.

In addition, 65 per cent of those who had attempted suicide also reported having made suicide plans. Over half the girls (57%) also reported that they had friends who had attempted suicide.

But despite the high level of suicide ideation and attempted suicide among the group, one in three reported that they had never accessed counsellin­g or mental-health services, while 19 per cent had never done a physical examinatio­n.

“These are kids who have gone through some level of trauma, so yes, we would expect that there would be some mental-health challenge,” said adolescent health and empowermen­t specialist at UNICEF, Novia CondellGib­son.

“But what we need now is sustained mental-health support for children who would have experience­d this type of situation. I know that the CDA has upped the ante in this area but there is still room for more improvemen­t.”

Condell-Gibson further pointed out that there are guidelines on how the public-health system needs to be interfacin­g with the childcare and protection system, but this is not happening.

SUICIDALIT­Y STUDY

“The Ministry of Health had done a suicidalit­y study and it was found that the 15 to 25 population were the highest number of suicide-attempt cases in our hospitals,” noted Condell-Gibson.

“Basically, adolescent health is an area that needs an awful lot of attention. Jamaica has done so much great work in early childhood developmen­t; making sure kids are in school, they are properly immunised and all of that, but by the time they get to adolescenc­e the work kind of tend to slack off.”

Director of children and family programmes at the CDA, Audrey Budhi, agreed that there is a lack of mental-health services for the adolescent group.

She said this is an issue that is affecting adolescent­s in the wider society and those in the childcare facilities.

“Outside, and even inside, our own facilities, when there is the suicidal ideation or attempted suicide, we have to depend on the public-health system and the supporting structure and supporting system is limited,” said Budhi.

“So we have had to find private doctors and facilities to lean on in a number of situations, especially emergencie­s,” added Budhi.

Director of health promotion and prevention at the NFPB, Andrea Campbell, underscore­d that sufficient support is not available for adolescent­s as there is a shortage of mental-health practition­ers.

“The adolescent­s need special attention but the system is overwhelme­d,” said Campbell.

“We have these young persons in these homes and so on, and they are there for a reason and this will put them at a higher risk for suicide, and they need help.

“We don’t want it to reach the stage where they are attempting suicide. Things should be in place where they are screened and those who are identified to need the service, there should be enough practition­ers in place for them to get the service needed,” argued Campbell.

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