The government has published the first cross-government
suicide prevention plan. The plan has a focus on how
social media and the latest technology – such as predictive
analytics and artificial intelligence – can identify those
at risk of suicide.
The plan will be led by the Minister for Mental Health and
Suicide Prevention . It sets out
actions for local government, the NHS and the criminal
justice system.
The plan commits the government to improving data held on
causes of death among veterans to better understand the
triggers that can lead someone to take their own life, such
as debt and gambling addiction.
It also includes greater focus on addressing the increase
in suicide and self-harm among young people, while social
media companies will be asked to take more responsibility
for online content that promotes methods of suicide and
self-harm.
Other parts of the plan include:
- every local authority putting an effective suicide
prevention plan in place
- ensuring every mental health trust has a zero-suicide
ambition plan for mental health inpatients by the end of
2019
- every prison putting actions in place to reduce
suicides and self-harm and improve staff awareness and
training
- addressing the specific needs of the highest risk
groups, including middle-aged men, with £25 million funding
- improving research on things that can be linked to
suicide, such as debt and gambling addiction
There are 4,500 suicides each year in England, and around
13 people end their life every day. Men are 3 times more
likely to die by suicide than women, and suicide is the
leading cause of death in men under 50. Suicide is also a
leading cause of death in young people.
The Prime Minister appointed as the UK’s first
Suicide Prevention Minister in October 2018. Part of her
role is to work across local and national government to
carry out the national suicide
prevention strategy, published in 2012.
The cross-government suicide prevention plan published in
January 2019 supports the national suicide prevention
strategy, following recommendations from the Health Select
Committee’s inquiry into suicide prevention in 2016.
Minister for Mental Health and Suicide Prevention said:
As a society we need to do everything we can to support
vulnerable and at-risk people, as well as those in
crisis, and give them the help they desperately need.
I will be working with local councils, the NHS and the
justice system to make sure suicide prevention plans are
put in place across public services.
Together, we will do everything in our power to meet our
ambition to reduce suicides by at least 10% by 2020 – and
I look forward to working collaboratively with social
media and tech companies to help achieve our ambitions.
Samaritans CEO Ruth Sutherland said:
We welcome the publication of the workplan and hope it
will help save more lives.
Every 6 seconds someone contacts Samaritans volunteers
for support, so we know that there is a huge amount to be
done to help those struggling to cope.
When we can work in partnership, we can make a bigger
impact in preventing suicide, particularly among the
hardest to reach high-risk groups such as low-income and
middle-aged men, and those whose occupation puts them at
higher risk. Working to address inequalities in suicide
is key.
We also need more research into the increases in
self-harm and suicide among young people, and why
gambling addiction and debt can drive suicides. Improving
suicide data is essential to help us put more effective
suicide prevention in place.