domingo, 22 de mayo de 2016

Doctors call for government action as suicide skyrockets

Doctors call for government action as suicide skyrockets





Doctors call for government action as suicide increases
     


A US doctor has voiced grave concern about government inaction on increasing suicide rates in the country.

A report released late last month from the National Center for Health Statistics documented a sobering set of statistics that indicate that the suicide rate has increased during the period 1999-2014, particularly in selected demographic groups.

The average percent increase in the age-adjusted suicide rate was about 1% per year from 1999 through 2006, which increased to 2% from 2006 to 2014. From 1999 through 2014, the percent increase in age-adjusted suicide was greater for females (a 45% increase) than males, who had a 16% increase. The suicide rate for females aged 10-14 years had the largest percent increase, a 200% increase.

Speaking to MedScape, Columbia University psychiatrist Jeffrey A. Lieberman criticized the lack of funding for research into suicide prevention:

it's hard to understand the disconnect between the amount of resources that we have and those that are being allocated to studying them and providing care…It's hard to understand why these rates, which are really the tips of the iceberg of an overall chronically failed mental healthcare policy in this country, have not risen to the level of a national emergency, like Zika virus, Ebola, or AIDS years before.
Lieberman speculated about the possible reasons for the lack of funding:

I can only think that the reason is that there is a stigma attached to mental illness. It relates to drug abuse and the conflation of things that are not medical conditions and may relate to failings in moral character or behaviors that are sinful.
Lieberman also gestured toward the need for tighter gun laws – a comment that was very timely. Another study, released on Friday, observed a correlation between States with liberal gun laws and increased suicide rates.
- See more at: http://www.bioedge.org/bioethics/doctors-call-for-government-action-as-suicide-increases/11883#sthash.2XRCiJcS.dpuf



Bioedge



Twelve years ago, political scientist Francis Fukuyama described transhumanism as “the world’s most dangerous idea”. In 2004, that sounded a bit daft -- almost no one had ever heard of the idea. For many people it still does, but now transhumanism is going mainstream.
Movies are being made about transhumanist themes; newspapers like the Washington Post are running feature articles on it; and a transhumanist is running for US President. It is indeed dangerous. As Fukuyama said:
The seeming reasonableness of the project, particularly when considered in small increments, is part of its danger. Society is unlikely to fall suddenly under the spell of the transhumanist worldview. But it is very possible that we will nibble at biotechnology's tempting offerings without realizing that they come at a frightful moral cost.
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Michael Cook

Editor

BioEdge



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