The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Are suicides really preventabl­e?

- Gracie Bonds Staples This Life This Life continued on B5

Suicide is now the 10th leading cause of death in this country, and yet we still talk about it in whispers — if we talk about it at all.

Time, though, has a way of demanding us to say something, do something.

That time came in quick heartbreak­ing succession last week when fashion designer Kate Spade and author/chef Anthony Bourdain had both died from apparent suicide, and well, we had a reference point. Everybody was talking.

That’s always a good thing. Talking about suicide and specifical­ly about mental illness helps decrease stigma. It also helps raise awareness about the warning signs and the role we can play to help those battling mental health get the care they need.

The big question that often arises for many of us is what can we do to prevent it?

Sadly, not much, according to experts.

We’ve known that much since at least 2016 when researcher­s studied risk factors — depression, previous suicide attempts, stressful life events and substance abuse — and experts’ ability to predict suicidal thoughts and behaviors over long periods of time. Their finding? Predicting if someone will attempt to take his or her own life is only slightly better than chance and has not significan­tly improved during the last five decades.

Those findings still hold true, said Joseph Franklin, an assistant professor of psychology at Florida State University and lead author of the study.

Franklin and his colleagues

conducted a meta-analysis of 365 studies conducted within the last 50 years.

The analyses, he said, showed a suicide expert who conducted an in-depth assessment of risk factors would predict a patient’s future suicidal thoughts and behaviors with approximat­ely the same degree of accuracy as someone with no knowledge of the patient.

“It’s basically on par with flipping a coin,” he said. “It turns out, for example, things like depression don’t predict much better than random guessing either.”

Franklin said, for instance, just 2 percent of people who are severely depressed will die by suicide. But 1.6 percent of the general population around the world and in the U.S. will eventually die by suicide.

“There are thousands of things relevant to suicide, but there’s no one thing among those thousands that stand out as being particular­ly important for prediction,” he said.

Still, Franklin said the findings do not necessaril­y mean that widely used risk guidelines are invalid or useless, or that therapists should abandon them.

“We recommend that these guidelines remain in use, but emphasize that there is an urgent need to evaluate these guidelines within longitudin­al studies,” he said.

Nadine J. Kaslow, a tenured professor in the Emory University School of Medicine and past president of the American Psychologi­cal Associatio­n, agreed traditiona­l risk factors such as depression, substance abuse, stress or previous suicide attempts aren’t adequate predictors of suicide by themselves.

What’s happening in a person’s life at the moment— a job loss, relationsh­ip breakup, or mental health or substance abuse problems combined with some current stressor — might be, she said.

At a time when people are desperatel­y searching for ways to tell if a loved one is in trouble, Kaslow said it’s important that people not blame themselves if they weren’t able to prevent someone from dying by suicide.

“To convey that there is nothing that can be done, will scare people even more and make them feel more helpless,” Kaslow said. “We’re not saying that people do nothing. It doesn’t mean we don’t keep trying to figure out what to do. If someone is struggling, we need to reach out to them. We do know that strong social support protects people from attempting suicide or dying by suicide.”

Franklin is hopeful a new approach to predicting suicide is in our future.

For instance, he said, multiple groups have begun working on developing “machine learning algorithms” — the same things that drive the Google Search algorithm, make your email spam filter effective and show you relevant advertisem­ents — to combine tens or even hundreds of risk factors together to predict suicidal behaviors.

“The preliminar­y results are promising, with algorithms predicting suicidal behaviors with 80-90 percent accuracy,” Franklin said. “The big catch though is translatin­g that to clinical practice will take a few years, and based on current studies, we can tell who will eventually die by suicide but not when.”

Meanwhile, he said, the only things that consistent­ly reduce risk are large-scale preventati­ve measures, such as reducing the availabili­ty of guns, putting pills in blister packs, or erecting fences around certain bridges.

And it goes without saying, you can always be kind and reach out to those you are concerned about and offer a helping hand. Find Gracie on Facebook (www.facebook.com/ graciestap­lesajc/) and Twitter (@GStaples_AJC) or email her at gstaples@ajc.com.

 ?? DREW ANGERER / GETTY IMAGES ?? A Kate Spade logo is seen on a Madison Avenue storefront after fashion designer Kate Spade was found dead in her apartment June 5 in New York City. Suicide is now the 10th leading cause of death in this country.
DREW ANGERER / GETTY IMAGES A Kate Spade logo is seen on a Madison Avenue storefront after fashion designer Kate Spade was found dead in her apartment June 5 in New York City. Suicide is now the 10th leading cause of death in this country.
 ??  ?? Nadine Kaslow, a psychology professor in the Emory University School of Medicine
Nadine Kaslow, a psychology professor in the Emory University School of Medicine
 ??  ??
 ?? DIMITRIOS KAMBOURIS / GETTY IMAGES FOR TURNER ?? Chef Anthony Bourdain speaks on stage during the Turner Upfront 2016 show at The Theater at Madison Square Garden in New York City. He was found dead June 8 in a hotel room in France.
DIMITRIOS KAMBOURIS / GETTY IMAGES FOR TURNER Chef Anthony Bourdain speaks on stage during the Turner Upfront 2016 show at The Theater at Madison Square Garden in New York City. He was found dead June 8 in a hotel room in France.

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