Gulf Today

Suicide among young women is at the highest ever level, but Brexit is overshadow­ing the crisis

- Jemima Olchawski,

With Brexit and the current political turmoil dominating the headlines, far too litle atention has been paid to new figures showing that suicide has risen ater a five-year downward trend. The numbers released last week by the Office for National Statistics paint a worrying picture. Every life lost is a tragedy with devastatin­g consequenc­es.

Among the figures is the shocking increase in rates of suicide in young women and girls, which has risen by 83 per cent in six years. It is now at the highest level ever recorded.

Today, on World Suicide Prevention Day, we must pay this the atention it urgently needs. Suicide is not inevitable and it is critical politician­s and services address the impact of gender and the experience­s of girls and young women.

Last year in the UK, 188 young women and girls under 25 took their own lives. On average,

that’s more than three every week. The total has risen by 29 from the previous year and 82 since 2012. This is unacceptab­le. Men are still three times as likely to die by suicide than women – an alarming figure which we must not lose sight of. But we must also make sure that young women and girls are not forgoten.

The reasons for suicide are many and complex but these latest figures add to a powerful body of evidence of mental health crisis among young women and girls.

Young women and girls are more likely to experience a common mental health problem like anxiety or depression, and recent research shows that levels of self-harm has risen dramatical­ly among them. Nearly a fith of women aged 16 to 24 has self-harmed. One in seven has post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).

Recent years have seen welcome political, media and public atention paid to mental health. Yet too oten, despite the clear gender difference­s and the particular­ly acute crisis facing girls, policy and discussion around mental health ignores the experience­s and challenges facing girls and young women.

And the mounting evidence suggests this is a flawed response.

Where the conversati­on does consider the particular needs of young women and girls, it is oten too simplistic. Body image and pressures at school are rightly cited as possible explanatio­ns for young women and girls’ deteriorat­ing mental health, but they are not the full story.

We cannot improve the mental health of our girls unless we start to understand that gender is part of the story, with a need to tackle root causes such as violence, abuse, discrimina­tion and poverty.

More than half of women with a mental health problem have experience­d abuse and for a quarter of those women, that abuse started in childhood. Young women are most at risk of domestic abuse and more than half of teenagers have experience­d some form of relationsh­ip abuse. We must challenge a culture that normalises violence and abuse against girls and young women.

And once problems occur, women and girls are regularly let to deal with them alone, with many reaching crisis point before they are able to get help. If they do get help, it isn’t always the help they need. Agenda, the alliance for women and girls at risk, has published research that has revealed that many mental health services are ill-equipped to support survivors of trauma, with the use of restraint still horrifying­ly high, and girls more likely to be restrained face-down than boys in services. Use of restraint can be retraumati­sing. In addition, the report from the CQC last year highlighte­d that our hospitals can be unsafe places for women, with 1,120 “sexual safety incidents” over just three months.

It’s time for a rethink. We must address the social and cultural factors that leave girls so exposed to trauma – from poverty and sexism to violence and abuse – and invest in services that recognise the significan­ce of trauma in girls and young women. Policymake­rs have a vital role to play in seting the tone and raising expectatio­ns.

Last year, we saw signs of progress with the Women’s Mental Health Taskforce in the Department of Health and Social Care, which highlighte­d the impact of gender. These are just the first steps in what continues too oten to be a gender blind policy area, with tragic consequenc­es.

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