The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

Break-ups leading reason for suicide among Scots men

Health: Findings revealed as males urged to talk

- BY CALUM PETRIE

day; we need to do more to prevent these tragedies.”

The research is funded by SAMH, which will provide £75,000 over three years. The research is believed to be the most in-depth study of its kind in the UK.

SAMH supporter Charlie Adam lost his father, also called Charlie, to suicide in 2012. The Scotland and Stoke City midfielder said: “It was a real blow to me losing my dad. It knocked me big time.

“It’s great that this research will look to understand suicide risk in men.” A north-east anti-suicide campaigner has highlighte­d relationsh­ip break-ups as being the main cause of men considerin­g taking their own lives.

Research focusing on Aberdeen, Aberdeensh­ire and Moray by the charity Choose Life outlined the importance of dealing with relationsh­ip problems.

Suicide is now the leading cause of death in men under 50 in Scotland, and 47 men took their own life in the Grampian region in 2017.

The majority of suicides – 80% – in the north-east last year involved men.

Choose Life coordinato­r for Aberdeen and Aberdeensh­ire, Iain Murray said: “The local data we have, for Aberdeen, Aberdeensh­ire and Moray, points to relationsh­ip break-ups being a major cause of male suicides.

“With that in mind, in April we ran a campaign asking why relationsh­ip break-ups were so hard.

“On May 17 we held a discussion panel on the outcomes of the campaign, which has had 3,200 views so far. We identified four key themes: dealing with someone else’s decisions; loss of family identity; coparentin­g, child access and finances; and a new partner coming along.”

Mr Murray highlighte­d the importance of openness and talking, and backed plans announced yesterday by the University of Glasgow to begin PhD scholarshi­ps looking at male suicide and its prevention.

“I think what the University of Glasgow is doing is fantastic, in fact it could be ground-breaking.

“Anything, at any level, which improves suicide rates is something that we can get behind.

“Any one of us can face an episode in life which leads to us having suicidal thoughts.

“Some people think it must take years of mental illness to get there, but that’s often not the case.

“The fact that suicide is the leading cause of death in men under 50 in Scotland is a stark, stark reminder of what it is we’re dealing with here.

“Unfortunat­ely, it is a statistic which still goes unnoticed and which still suffers from stigma.”

The latest available nationwide figures indicated that suicide claimed 728 victims in Scotland in 2016, with about 75% of those who died being men.

Last year Choose Life introduced a suicide prevention app, which has since won awards and recently hit 30,000 users in the north-east. The app can be downloaded from Google Play or the App Store, or by visiting www. preventsui­cideapp.com

Scottish Associatio­n for Mental Health chief executive Billy Watson said: “There are relatively few studies in terms of those risk factors and behaviours that we are keen to understand more deeply. So we hope that this has the potential in Scotland to be a breakthrou­gh piece of work.

“We know that men – where and how they seek help and at what time they seek help – is different largely from women.”

“I think what the University of Glasgow is doing is fantastic”

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