The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Youth suicide PSAs targeted at mon, dad

As deaths rise, GBI joins several state agencies to produce series of ads.

- By Asia Simone Burns asia.burns@coxinc.com

The Georgia Bureau of Investigat­ion is rolling out a new public service announceme­nt aimed at combating a rise in youth suicides. The video features parents and other family members of young people who either took their own lives or attempted to.

“We’ve had children 6 years old commit suicide,” GBI Director Vernon Keenan said in the PSA unveiled Wednesday. “They’re in the GBI morgue to be autopsied. What a tragedy. A grade school child commits suicide?”

Suicide is now the second leading cause of death in the nation for people ages 15 to 19, according to the CDC. Since the beginning of 2018, 23 youths under the age of 17 have taken their lives in the state. Within the past five years, there have been 211 — all of which were autopsied by the GBI’s Medical Examiner.

The number of suicide attempts might be quadruple that, Keenan said. The GBI estimates that for every death by suicide there are 25 attempts. That’s based on the volume of hospitaliz­ations each year.

The GBI partnered with Voices for Georgia’s Children, Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta and the state department­s of Education, Human Services and Behavioral Health and Developmen­tal Disabiliti­es to produce a series of PSAs.

The first was aimed at encouragin­g children to help other children. The latest PSA targets parents. It shows adults sharing their experience­s with loved ones and suicide.

That’s an important first step, according to Child Fatality Review program director Trebor Randle. Historical­ly, organizati­ons have avoided using the word “suicide” out of an abundance of caution to prevent copycat suicides. But that won’t fix this issue, Randle contended.

“If we don’t start talking about this, we will see an increase in these numbers,” Randle said.

Teressa Stann, founder of the LRJ Foundation, a local nonprofit that focuses on suicide prevention, agrees. In 2011, Stann lost her brother Louie Ruspi to suicide. She said he was “the world’s greatest actor” — neither his friends nor his family knew the extent of his emotional duress.

Walker Tisdale, director of suicide prevention at the Department of Behavioral Health and Developmen­tal Disabiliti­es, said focusing on “protective factors” is also an important part of suicide prevention. He urges parents to look for warning signs — such as social isolation — in their children’s behavior that could indicate they are considerin­g some form of self harm.

“If you have a young person at home with 10,000 Facebook friends but only one real friend, that’s a problem that we want to invert,” he said.

But one of the most vital parts in prevention is developing a support system, Cheryl Benefield said. Benefield, who is the family and community engagement specialist at the Department of Education’s Project AWARE, found out about her son’s plans to attempt suicide before it was too late, and she hopes that opening dialogue will help other parents and educators to do the same.

The Department of Education held a series of summits last year to help educators recognize signs that a student might be under duress. It’ll be hosting four more trainings this year in response to schools that have asked for more training, Benefield said.

“I encourage educators to be that person for your children,” she said. “Be that person who a child can turn to. Be the person.”

 ?? ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM ?? Teressa Stann, whose brother committed suicide five years ago, tells of her experience during a news conference Wednesday at GBI headquarte­rs in Decatur. The event was held to roll out a PSA series aimed at parents.
ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM Teressa Stann, whose brother committed suicide five years ago, tells of her experience during a news conference Wednesday at GBI headquarte­rs in Decatur. The event was held to roll out a PSA series aimed at parents.
 ?? ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM ?? Vernon Keenan, director of the Georgia Bureau of Investigat­ion, speaks at Wednesday’s news conference on youth suicide prevention held at GBI headquarte­rs in Decatur. With Keenan were (from left): Sakema Harmom, assistant division director of field operations; Teressa Stann, founder of the LRJ Foundation, a local nonprofit that focuses on suicide prevention; Cheryl Benefield of the Department of Education; and Walker Tisdale, director of suicide prevention at Georgia Department of Behavioral Health and Developmen­tal Disabiliti­es.
ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM Vernon Keenan, director of the Georgia Bureau of Investigat­ion, speaks at Wednesday’s news conference on youth suicide prevention held at GBI headquarte­rs in Decatur. With Keenan were (from left): Sakema Harmom, assistant division director of field operations; Teressa Stann, founder of the LRJ Foundation, a local nonprofit that focuses on suicide prevention; Cheryl Benefield of the Department of Education; and Walker Tisdale, director of suicide prevention at Georgia Department of Behavioral Health and Developmen­tal Disabiliti­es.

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