WORLD SUICIDE PREVENTION DAY- SEPTEMBER-10
Events and activities for World Suicide Prevention Day include:
The
launch of new government initiatives to prevent suicide. Conferences,
open days, Educational
seminars or public lectures.
Media
programs promoting suicide awareness and prevention.
Memorial
services or candlelight ceremonies to remember those who died from suicide.
Organizing
cultural or spiritual events, fairs or exhibitions.
Launches
of publications about suicide awareness and prevention.
Training
courses about suicide and depression awareness.
Many of these initiatives are celebrated in various countries worldwide.
Some of these events and activities are held at a local level, while others are
nation-wide. Many communities around the world reaffirm their commitment to
suicide prevention on World Suicide Prevention Day.
Public life
World Suicide Prevention Day is not a public holiday.
Background
Nearly 3000 people on average die by suicide daily, according to WHO. For
every person who completes a suicide, 20 or more may attempt to end their
lives. About one million people die by suicide each year. Suicide is a major
preventable cause of premature death which is influenced by psycho-social,
cultural and environmental risk factors that can be prevented through worldwide
responses that address these main risk factors. There is strong evidence
indicating that adequate prevention can reduce suicide rates.
World Suicide Prevention Day, which first started in 2003, is annually held
on September 10 each year as an IASP initiative. WHO co-sponsors this event.
World Suicide Prevention Day aims to:
Raise
awareness that suicide is preventable.
Improve
education about suicide.
Spread information about suicide
awareness.
Decrease
stigmatization regarding suicide.
WHO and IASP work with governments and other partners to ensure that
suicide is no longer stigmatized, criminalized or penalized. WHO's role is to
build political action and leadership to develop national responses to prevent
suicide, strengthen national planning capacity to establish the core building
blocks of such a national response, and build the national capacities to
implement these responses.
Prof. John Kurakar
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