PORTLAND, Ore., March 1, 2005

Suicides Outnumber Homicides

Statistic Cited At Conference To Prevent Deaths Thru Awareness

    • Activists seeking to lift the stigma some associate with depression point to the achievements and personal struggles of Abraham Lincoln (left) and Meriwether Lewis (right), the 19th century explorer.

      Activists seeking to lift the stigma some associate with depression point to the achievements and personal struggles of Abraham Lincoln (left) and Meriwether Lewis (right), the 19th century explorer.  (CBS/AP)

    • Tipper Gore in 1999, when she revealed her own battle with clinical depression a decade earlier, in a crusade for better access to mental health care and greater public awareness of the problem.

      Tipper Gore in 1999, when she revealed her own battle with clinical depression a decade earlier, in a crusade for better access to mental health care and greater public awareness of the problem.  (AP (file))

    • Winston Churchill, British Prime Minister from 1940 to 1945 and from 1951 to 1955, got England through its darkest hours but many times fought depression, which he called his _black dog._

      Winston Churchill, British Prime Minister from 1940 to 1945 and from 1951 to 1955, got England through its darkest hours but many times fought depression, which he called his "black dog."  (AP (file))

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(AP)  Suicides outnumber homicides in the United States, and some 90 percent of people who kill themselves suffer from a diagnosable and preventable problem such as depression, a top mental health official said Monday.

Charles Curie, who heads the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration in the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, said suicides in the United States run at about 80 a day or more than 29,000 a year, three for each two homicides.

He addressed the opening of a three-day suicide prevention conference for mental health and social workers from eight Western States.

"Patients and consumers must be at the center of physical and mental health care," he said. "Without that ... people will continue to be leery in seeking the help they need, confused about how to get the help they need and scared to reach out for it."

He said such an approach is needed to shed the stigma many attach to mental health and its treatment.

He praised recent federal funding for suicide prevention programs, including a national suicide prevention hot line (1-800-273-TALK) but said many workers in that field aren't aware of the resources available to them.

Oregon's Republican Sen. Gordon Smith, who lost a college freshman son to suicide in 2003, praised the Bush administration's budget for leaving the $11.5 million for the Garrett Lee Smith Act, a suicide prevention package named after his son, intact but said the measure needs $27.5 million to be fully funded.

Smith said when he learned of the suicide he contemplated giving up public office to return to Oregon and focus more on the rest of his family.

Instead, he said, he chose to make suicide prevention his cause.

"It is a matter of history that many of our greatest leaders in the last few centuries have been afflicted with various types of mental illnesses," Smith said.

He said explorer Meriwether Lewis, who had been secretary to Thomas Jefferson and later apparently committed suicide, was a brilliant man "but he had in his mind some inner demons, some difficulties with depression."

He said the late British Prime Minister Winston Churchill also suffered from debilitating depression, something Churchill called his "black dog.'

Abraham Lincoln, he said, was "a brooding and often melancholy man."

He said through help from family and friends, Churchill and Lincoln still were able to make an enormous difference for the world.

"I want you to know that I know that depression, mental illnesses don't register Republican or Democrat, They affect all of us, I don't care what your race is, what your religion is, what your ethnicity is, your national origin, your sexual orientation," said Smith.

He asked conference participants to be the "foot soldiers" in getting the Garrett Lee Smith Act fully funded.

State Epidemiologist Mel Cohn told the conference that just in Oregon in 2002 there were 518 suicide deaths, 71 more than from traffic accidents.



By Joseph B. Frazier ©MMV The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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