Each day, a suicide is brought to my attention. I have written widely on the suicide crises. I have written about the disproportionate rate of death by suicide for the descendants of the First Peoples and for first and second generation Australians and for LGBQTI Australians. Recently I wrote about the tragic suicide of 18 year old Philinka Powdrill, who represents so many of the suicides that tear at families long after one is gone. In the last few days, I learned of three more young Aboriginal persons suiciding while in the prime of life – all of them women; one of a 26 year old woman last night at Baluyu community, 10kms from Fitzroy Crossings. Another of a 24 year old mother in Balga, Perth.
The only jurisdiction in Australia to record an increase in the rate of suicide between 2006 to 2010 compared to the previous five years, according to the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) was Western Australia. But this outlier spike in suicides in Western Australia disguises the fact that little has improved. The State Government may argue that they have lowered suicide rates but this is against the outlier. When you remove the outlier, the otherwise long term high rates of suicides have not decreased.
As a result of the horrific increase in suicides in Western Australia during that five year period, the State endured an increase from 11.8 suicides per 100,000 population to 13.2 suicides per 100,000. But across the nation there was an overall decline from 11.4 to 10.7 suicides per 100,000 population.
During the five year horror stretch for Western Australia, a disproportionate number of the suicides occurred in the Kimberley – particularly in and around Fitzroy Crossings, Mowanjum and Balgo.
Suicide and severe self-harms are crises that need to be addressed. They will not be solved with piecemeal funding approaches for one-off workshops and ‘suicide prevention ambassadors’. The social health and well-being of communities, towns and city districts must be evaluated and redressed. Support services and empowerment programs must be assessed in terms of their capacity to engage with people and whether they are able to do so 24/7.
Suicide is the number one cause of death in Australia for males who are aged 14 to 50 years. More lives are lost to suicide nationally than are lost to any other tragedy including road fatalities.
Suicide is disproportionately higher among First Peoples but it is a problem for all Australians. However more needs to be done for First Peoples than for all other cultural groups though suicide is higher for many migrant groups as opposed to most of the rest of the population. Suicide rates are also very high among LGBQTI Australians. However First Peoples, other cultures and LGBQTI are not adequately represented across the board in discussions on mental health and suicide prevention. Their exclusion or their just being tagged on by research groups, think thanks and conference groups risks a one size fits all approach to policy making.
Suicide prevention must become one of the nation’s priority agendas. People need people and this is the fundamental underwriting of suicide prevention. Over the past five years, the average number of suicides each year have been close to 2,500. There are on average seven suicides per day. However, the Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander population is only 2.5 per cent of the national population however one in every 24 deaths of an Aboriginal person is by suicide according to the Australian Bureau of Statistics. This is a horrific rate but according to my research, when we include estimated unreported and unclassified suicides I believe the rate is 1 in 12 of Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander deaths by suicide.
The overall national suicide rate peaked at its highest in 1963, at 17.5 per 100,000 and many of the suicides of were within first waves of migrant groups. Loneliness, isolation, racism and racialisation were huge factors. Today we find the highest suicide rates among First Peoples and then among first and second generations of ‘migrants’. In 1997, the national suicide rate was 14.6 but has since fallen to generally less than 12 per 100,000 each year.
The highest age-specific suicide rate for males in 2012 was within the 85 years and older age group – 38 per 100,000 population. The rate is considerably higher than all the other age groups – for instance 27 per 100,000 for the 45 to 49 year old age group. In 2012, three quarters of all suicides were by males.
According to the World Health Organisation the highest national suicide rate is French Guyana at 44 per 100,000.
So, here is the grave disparity.
In 2012, suicide accounted for 1.7 per cent of deaths. Male suicides in 2012 were 2.5 per cent of all male deaths – 1 in 40. Female suicides were 1 per cent of all female deaths – 1 in 100. However 4.2 per cent of all Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander deaths were by suicide – 1 in 24. I argue even higher, that it is more likely 1 in 12.
Why is this happening? Major contributors are disregarded by certain researchers, policy makers and Governments. These contributors and stressors, although not limited to, include cultural settings, a confrontation of cultural norms, racialisation, racism, the psychosocial identity and extreme poverty.
The highest suicide rates were in the Northern Territory where one third of its total population are First Peoples. Then followed by Tasmania and Western Australia but when the suicide rates are disaggregated to First Peoples alone, then it is a whole different story.
The descendants of First Peoples are less than 2.5 per cent of the total Australian population, however their children make up nearly 6 per cent of the total Australian child population. If the suicide rates are not reduced in the years to come the overall national suicide rates may increase to what they were in 1963 and 1997.
The majority of Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander suicides occur before 35 years of age. This has devastating psychological and social impacts on families. According to the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare, the most vulnerable age-specific category are the 25 to 29 year old Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander males – 91 suicides per 100,000 Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander population.
So, where earlier I wrote about 11 suicides per 100,000, 18 per 100,000 and for 85 year olds a high of 37 per 100,000 population now we are looking at figures like 91 per 100,000 when we disaggregate to Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islanders.
Here is where we must ask the big questions of race, racism, racialisation, marginalisation, extreme poverty and social health. There are no other explanations even if the nay say mob and the one size fits all reductionists argue otherwise.
Nationally, Aboriginal males aged 15 to 19 years have a suicide rate of 44 per 100,00 compared to non-Aboriginal males 15 to 19 years of 19 per 100,000.
20 to 24 year old Aboriginal males have a suicide rate of 75 per 100,000 compared to non-Aboriginal 20 to 24 year olds,
22 per 100,000.
25 to 29 year old Aboriginal males have a suicide rate of 91 per 100,000 compared to their non-Aboriginal counterparts, 18 per 100,000.
30 to 34 year old Aboriginal males have a suicide rate of 60 per 100,000, as opposed to their counterparts of 15 per 100,000.
Spatial mapping and disaggregating are imperative eye openers that have been long neglected. Over certain periods of time some regions have endured suicide rates of more than 100 and 200 per 100,000 population but even outside these outliers, the long term suicide trends, age-specific or overall, of First Peoples are worse not just more than the rest of the nation but also worse than most of the rest of world’s suicide rates.
Several years ago, a spate of suicides in a part of the Kimberley was touted 182 times the national suicide rate. But despite the normal retraction of this outlier, Governments should not insult researchers and their constituents by suggesting they have somehow brought down the suicide rate when they have not. They should not be making out they have responded to the long term suicide crisis because the outliers have flattened to out to what are still high suicide rates.
They should make their statements contextually against the long term trends and not against outliers.
Last year, the Western Australian Auditor-General, Colin Murphy criticised the inadequate suicide prevention strategies by the Government. Mr Murphy stated in a report tabled to Parliament that strategies and policies were inadequate. However, the State Government remains bent on a selling a message that it has responded.
Mr Murphy warned the Government to not delay in putting forward a substantial approach to suicide prevention.
“When we look at the implementation (of suicide prevention programs) there was certainly an opportunity to do much better, it didn’t go as well as it could have.”
“Changes were made in 2012 and 2013, increasing the number of community action plans, but other parts of the strategy were not completed.”
In 2012, there was an increase above the national average in suicides across the nation among First Peoples. It was worst in Western Australia. Western Australia’s overall suicide crisis is demonstrated by the fact that in 2012, the State reported 366 suicides, up from the very high 194 of 2004. A disproportionate burden of these suicides was among the State’s First Peoples who comprise less than 3 per cent of the State’s population. The Kimberley where half the population is of First Peoples was the worst affected region. For the first ten years of the new millennia there were 996 reported suicides of First Peoples, about 100 per year. But tragically the loss of life by suicide increased in 2011 and 2012. It is all getting worse for First Peoples – arrest rates, jail rates, homeless rates, extensiveness of extreme poverty. The more west we travel across the continent, the worse it gets for First Peoples, worse in northern South Australia, worse throughout the Northern Territory, and worst of all, Western Australia.
The horror of all this is compounded by the estimate that for every suicide there are up to 40 attempted suicides, and each year there are tens of thousands of hospitalisations for self-harms.
Last year, Kija Elder and Kimberley parliamentarian Josie Farrer said to me, “There is not enough funding for our people in support and counselling services, for healing and for grief. They are left to themselves and to the community alone.”
“The communities need not only services but also economic and social development. They are impoverished and are not able to keep up with the cost of living let alone enjoy the aspirations most of the rest of the nation enjoys.”
“Can you imagine what it is like for a young father on Centrelink or on low income to have to meet rising costs to keep a roof over his young family and to have to afford nutritious food for the table but then to not be able to afford all this?”
“Healthy food is much more expensive in the remote and regions than it is in capital cities and in big towns. Price hiking doesn’t worry whether you are poor.”
Western Australia has a high child suicide rate. From 2007 to 2011 there were 36 reported suicides of 13 to 17 year olds alone. 13, or 36 per cent, of these suicides were Aboriginal children but in Western Australia Aboriginal children make up less than 6 per cent of children in this age category. It is important to note that all but one of these Aboriginal children were in school, so let us drop at least one of the racial stereotypes that some will assert. Broader statistical reporting reflects the crisis with Aboriginal youth aged 15 to 24 years. Their suicide rate is 42 per 100,000 as opposed to the 8 per 100,000 for non-Aboriginal children aged 15 to 24 years.
It is a nightmare of neglect for all our children, for the whole nation, but of catastrophic proportions for First Peoples.
What needs to be done will only be achieved when the right people are in the right appointments to lead the way. This is my close up experience.
Declaration: Gerry Georgatos is a Community Consultant with the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Suicide Prevention Evaluation Project (ATSISPEP). The views in this article are his own.
Lifeline’s 24-hour hotline, 13 11 14, provides counselling and advice to anyone in crisis.
More reading and links:
It is racism killing our people – suicides born of racism
Kimberley suicide rate – one of the world’s highest – Yiriman is the way to go
My Country – But look how I am forced to live
What will it take to end Aboriginal disadvantage, the inequalities and the various crises?
What sort of Australia is this? Seven homeless children in an asbestos slum
Six homeless children fighting for a better tomorrow
Quality of life for Australians 2nd only to Norway but for Aboriginal Peoples 122nd
Dumbartung convenes suicide crisis summit
Suicide attempts among women on the rise
Australia’s Aboriginal children detained at the world’s highest rates
Culture should not be denied – change needs unfolding, not impost
Everyone in the Territory doing well, except for Aboriginal Peoples
Australia’s Aboriginal children, the world’s highest suicide rate
Wes Morris slams government suicide prevention programs
How many more suicides will it take? How many more deaths?
Hopelessness in suicide riddled communities
More government neglect of Aboriginal children
In identity lay the answers – ATSI suicides
$25.4 billion spent on Aboriginal disadvantage is a lie
Beagle Bay to State Parliament – Farrer speaks out on suicides
Government to address Aboriginal suicides
996 Aboriginal deaths by suicide – another shameful Australian record
996 deaths by suicide – one in 24 die by suicide
Australia’s Aboriginal suicide epidemic – whose child will be the next to die?
77 Aboriginal suicides in South Australia alone
Kimberley’s Aboriginal peoples old at 45 years
Australia, the mother of all jailers of Aboriginal people
Tumult of death – 400 suicides in last three years
30 suicides in the last three months as we wait for promises to be kept
Suicide crisis – genocidal numbers
Suicide crisis – from tragic to catastrophic
Suicide crisis needs real funding and actions
Hundreds more will suicide if we wait for 2015
Nothing will be done about suicides crisis
Elders across Australia say governments need to listen to them on how to address youth suicide
Suicides – western society and ancient cultures clash
If we are serious about suicide prevention
Australia’s suicide crisis should not be played down – the media must highlight it
From my father’s death bed to the must-do to end the suicides
Governments promise on ending suicides must come good now
More confirmation of what everyone knows, was suicide prevention inadequate
The must-do need to listen and trust if suicides crisis is to end
Working together – mental health and suicide prevention roundtable
Break the taboo around suicides, we reduce suicides
Suicide crises born of Australia’s inhumanity
Suicides crisis linked to incarceration
Wes Morris urges funding for cultural methodologies
The betrayal of our children – the Northern Territory
New project offers hope to reduce Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander suicides
Depression and suicide prevention must be top of the agenda this century
World Suicide Prevention Day – suicide takes more lives than war
Western Australia – 1 in 13 in a jail, a bullshit state of affairs
Yiriman saving lives in the midst of the Kimberley’s suicide crises
The smaller a community, the less likely a suicide
Overcoming disadvantage report shows disadvantage not overcome
600 Black deaths in custody by 2025 – jail numbers to soar
Get out of the way – Aboriginal suicide rates will drop
A nation shamed when the solution for its children is homelessness
Christmas, a period of vulnerability for many
Stop peddling lies $30 billion spent on Indigenous disadvantage is a lie
To end our trauma government must stop the assault on our people and our culture
In Australia there is the Aboriginal rights struggle
Kirstie Parker, Mick Gooda say enough of fine words – close the gap a big fat lie
HIghest child removal rates in the world worse than Stolen Generations
Other media:
A nation shamed when child sees suicide as the solution
Families urged to look after each other as suicide rates soar
Response to rash of suicides in remote WA regions
ABC 7:30 Report – Deaths in custody and jail rates
Radio:
WGAR News: “What about Lore and Culture?” Rosalie Kunoth-Monks: Geoff Bagnall, The Stringer
https://indymedia.org.au/2015/02/22/wgar-news-what-about-lore-and-culture-rosalie-kunoth-monks-geoff-bagnall-the-stringer
Contents:
* News Analysis: The Stringer: National Indigenous Times journalists win awards highlighting the big issues – ‘injustice’, ‘ways forward’, ‘unity’
* Analysis / Opinion: Geoff Bagnall, The Stringer: “What about Lore and Culture?” Rosalie Kunoth-Monks
* Analysis / Opinion: Geoff Bagnall, The Stringer: Failed policies make up Closing the Gap
* Analysis / Opinion: Marcus Waters, The Conversation: New MPs beware: neoliberalism is an Indigenous health hazard
* Audio Interview: Let’s Talk’s Tiga Bayles interviews Dr Woolombi Waters, a Kamilaroi man and writer and lecturer at Griffith University
* Analysis / Opinion: Gerry Georgatos, The Stringer: Understanding Australia’s suicide crises
* Analysis / Opinion: Gerry Georgatos, The Stringer: ‘Class action’ to take on State Government over heritage changes
* Analysis / Opinion: Dr Marcus Woolombi Waters – courtesy of The National Indigenous Times & Lets Talk: Farewell National Indigenous Times and Colleages
* Analysis / Opinion: Gerry Georgatos – courtesy of The National Indigenous Times: Farewell noble friends at The National Indigenous Times
* Interview: Helmut Rauer, WAZ: Human Rights: Welcome by Aboriginal People [Featuring Sabine Kacha]
As a Registered Counsellor in private practice in Johannesburg I am passionate about reaching those who may have suicidal ideation.
I read your article with great interest but saddened to hear how high the suicide rate in Australia actually is.
I am curious to know who are the “First People” and also “LGBQTI” and what this stands for.
Regards
Brenda McCutcheon
“First People” is a term sometimes used to refer to Indigenous people. I believe in this article the term is referring to people who identify as being Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander.
There are variations of LGBQTI (e.g. an A on the end or no Q). Follow this link for definition of LGBQTIA
http://tahoesafealliance.org/for-lgbqtia/what-does-lgbtqia-mean/
Regards, Tania. G
gday’ for well over 20 yrs we have held one of the highest suicide rates in the world
You can directly thank foriegn banker funded politicians ,
Ignorant masses & [names deleted by The Stringer’s Editors]
Our constitution has been usurped, our wealth for toil & golden soil has been stolen.
Unlawful legislation, unlawful taxes, licences, & unlawful foriegn loans, treasonous sales of our public paid n built infrastructure, homes, resources , livelihoods , business foriegn debt worshipping statist satanists have & continue to work daily stopping any australian frm getting ahead, a fair go or even the ability to make subsistence doing what we love,, if not slave wk to week for a fake debt money worshippin corporation & over ur head in debt , disrespectful & self destructive moron you will be made similar to a terrorist n earmarked for organ donation , likely have ur orgabs harvested in ur driveway once allowed chinas buses atart here, ofc ur neighbours will not care n think u deserved it.. So continue to do fck all & nothing gd ppl & watch as ur children suicide coz nothing gd enough , nothing right & if not slave for foriegn fake debt will die in streets or refuge or houso anyway, the fluoride may stop most of u xaring & thinking , but by time u realise ur ignorant consequences come reality you will die of cancer frm fluoride & come str8 bck to nappys of a victim u had a hand in creating. & much worse. Tis a sad tale for vaccinators tht inject mercury & live viruses into thierselves & thier healthy children for foreign agenda also,
Having bn a youth/social worker during my teens bcoz of understanding suicide personally , [deleted by The Stringer’s Editors], is a victim emselves but continues to do fck all abbout root of the cause & instead complain about shiz bring fellow beings down to feel better & 95% of you couldnt even get past the first 10words of my comment or the post this comment is made on., n yes feel free to [deleted] about my spelling rather thn the issues ive spoken of .
The comment above me although difficult to read because it was typed hurriedly on a phone, is so correct, it is almost the complete truth, however most people are truly and unbeknownst to them educated by the tv and Hollywood. If we don’t do something soon we will end up exactly like the poor in Bangladesh or the Philippines. Take the time to read that fellows comment above.
WGAR News: The extensiveness of Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander suicides – 1 in 20: Gerry Georgatos, The Stringer
https://indymedia.org.au/2015/02/27/wgar-news-the-extensiveness-of-aboriginal-torres-strait-islander-suicides-1-in-20-gerry
Contents:
* Analysis / Opinion: Gerry Georgatos, The Stringer: Suicides are preventable – here is what we must begin to do
* Analysis / Opinion: Gerry Georgatos, The Stringer: The extensiveness of Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander suicides – 1 in 20
* Analysis / Opinion: Gerry Georgatos, The Stringer: Preventing suicide – “no greater legacy”
* Analysis / Opinion: Gerry Georgatos, The Stringer: Understanding Australia’s suicide crises
* Analysis / Opinion: Gerry Georgatos, Green Left: Aboriginal suicides rise amid worsening conditions
* Analysis / Opinion: Susan Allan, WSWS: Australia: Eleven-year-old Aboriginal boy commits suicide
* Analysis / Opinion: Gerry Georgatos, The Stringer: “It is racism killing our people – suicides born of racism”
* Analysis / Opinion: Sue Lannin, ABC News: Government Indigenous suicide prevention programs are a failure, NT elder David Cole says
* Audio Interview: Let’s Talk’s Tiga Bayles interviews Gerry Georgatos about the continuing increasing rate of suicides
* Audio Interview: Graham Backhaus, The Wire: Suicide crisis – Indigenous People [Featuring Mr Gerry Georgatos]
* WGAR Background to Suicide and Self-harm in First Nations Communities
This was extremely formative. Something like the Guardian news should republish this.
You should hear Gerry in person. I listened to his excellently informative presentation on suicide at a conference session in Adelaide yesterday. He is even more inspiring in person.
Aboriginal Suicide
WGAR News: How an Arnhem family turned their sister’s death into an Indigenous youth suicide prevention group: Emilia Terzon, 105.7 ABC Darwin
https://indymedia.org.au/2015/05/17/wgar-news-how-an-arnhem-family-turned-their-sisters-death-into-an-indigenous-youth
Contents:
* News Analysis: Emilia Terzon, 105.7 ABC Darwin: How an Arnhem family turned their sister’s death into an Indigenous youth suicide prevention group
* Analysis: Jens Korff, Creative Spirits: Aboriginal suicide rates
* Analysis / Opinion: Gerry Georgatos, The Stringer: Truth, not lies, on Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander suicide rates
* Crisis Support – Talk to Someone – 24-hour/day 7-days/week:
Lifeline – Crisis Support and Suicide Prevention: 13 11 14 https://www.lifeline.org.au/Get-Help/
Suicide Call Back Service: 1300 659 467 https://www.suicidecallbackservice.org.au/
Beyond Blue – Talk it through with us: 1300 22 4636 http://www.beyondblue.org.au/get-support/get-immediate-support
* WGAR Background to Suicide and Self-harm in First Nations Communities