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Get the most interesting and important stories from the 91porn视频.Black Americans need culturally relevant suicide prevention programs, a new study found
Suicide deaths among Black adults in the United States were rising before the COVID-19 pandemic, and the trend has persisted. While rates tend to be highest for adolescents and young adults, research has shown that rising rates continue across lifespans.听听
, the William S. Dietrich II Chair and associate professor of Africana studies in Pitt鈥檚 Kenneth P. Dietrich School of Arts and Sciences, wanted to understand how prepared communities were to tackle this crisis and to reverse the trend. Working with a team of researchers from Kent State, where she taught until December 2022, and Auburn University, the medical sociologist turned to northeast Ohio, where suicide rates among Black residents rose more than 100% between 2011 and 2021.
The team found there was work to be done before the communities they surveyed were prepared to successfully address the issue. 鈥淧eople were engaged and aware of general issues their communities faced,鈥 Spates said, but when it came to suicide specifically, people were less informed.
in the journal Death Studies.
For the study, researchers surveyed 25 people from four counties across northeast Ohio. The team wanted to gauge how much people knew about suicide rates and what tools communities had to address the problem. The Community Readiness Model, which rates on a scale of 1 to 9, can help researchers understand how prepared a community is to overcome a shared problem. The survey respondents' scores averaged 3.5 which, the authors wrote, translates to the sentiment, 鈥淪omething should probably be done but what? Maybe someone else will work on this.鈥
Survey responses suggested a lot of misconceptions about suicide, Spates said, including the notion that it just isn鈥檛 really an issue for Black people. 鈥淚nstead, it鈥檚 a white issue 鈥 maybe an upper middle-class issue,鈥 she said. 鈥溾楤lack people don鈥檛 commit suicide. That鈥檚 not something we do,鈥欌 survey respondents said.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 a misconception.鈥澨
But researchers also found raising awareness won鈥檛 be enough to help communities reverse suicide trends, because even some who did know about the rising rates didn鈥檛 see it as a top priority.
鈥淭hey would say, 鈥楬ow do we worry about suicide when people are overdosing on fentanyl, and people are homeless, and folks are being incarcerated disproportionately?鈥欌 Spates said. Some were more explicit about their feelings. 鈥淲e need jobs. We need good education for our kids. Should we be putting resources into this issue?鈥
The researchers鈥 next step will be to return to the communities they surveyed. But they won鈥檛 be going back with a plan to fix everything. They will instead work with the communities to develop culturally relevant suicide prevention and intervention strategies that will be tailored to each community鈥檚 specific needs.
鈥淭he solution isn鈥檛 to name the problem and throw money at it from afar,鈥 said Jenny Cureton, a professor at Kent State and member of the research team. 鈥淭he community guides how the issue is understood and what solutions are best,鈥 making sure they are culturally appropriate.
For instance, some people surveyed had seen informational pamphlets about suicide, but they didn鈥檛 think the subject was relevant to them. When they saw the word, 鈥渟uicide,鈥 they typically thought of white people.
That underscores the point that solutions will require more than leaving suicide-awareness pamphlets in the lobby of a Black church, Spates said. 鈥淚t means actually using statistics about Black folks who die by suicide every year, or sharing culturally specific, evidence-based protective factors or risk factors that relate specifically to your community.鈥
And that generic term, 鈥渃ommunity,鈥 needs to be specifically defined 鈥淭he Black community is not homogeneous; there are all sorts of ethnic differences, gender differences, different sexual orientations, differences by class, religion 鈥 I could go down the line.鈥
The more attention given to the mental health of Black Americans, the more opportunities researchers will have to work with different communities and help develop made-to-fit interventions. 听听听听
鈥淭his is an encouraging time to tackle a very disturbing trend,鈥 Cureton said. 鈥淟eaders within the local community and the state, as well as expert professionals, respected stars and others with influence are speaking powerfully about the problem of Black suicide, and positively about ways to address it.鈥
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鈥 Brandie Jefferson