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NEW ZEALAND
CYF project halves child suicide rate
A three-year project by welfare and health agencies
has halved the rate of suicide among some of the country's most at-risk
children. Researchers say the project has the potential to put a massive
dent in New Zealand's youth suicide rate currently the highest in the
developed world. The results of the Towards Well Being suicide
monitoring project were due to be presented to an international
conference on youth suicide this weekend and are expected to gain global
attention. I think that there is a chance a number of children are
alive today because of this programme, said Child Youth and Family's
acting chief social worker Craig Smith.
Previous research showed children who had had contact
with Child Youth and Family were 15 times as likely to kill themselves
as other children, and accounted for more than 40 per cent of all youth
suicides in New Zealand. The reason is obvious we are dealing with
the most at-risk children in the country, Mr Smith said. Because of
this high suicide rate, the department developed a pilot project in
conjunction with the Wellington School of Medicine and Health Sciences
three years ago to attempt to tackle the problem. Children and teenagers
considered at risk because of depression, previous suicide attempts,
mental health or drug and alcohol problems were referred on to the
programme. The result is more than a 50 per cent reduction in suicides
among CYF children, despite a surge in abuse notifications to the
department and the suicide rates in the general youth population
remaining high.
Wanganui social work supervisor David Alexander said
the project set out a simple way of questioning all children about their
mental wellbeing when they came to CYF's attention. Depressed and
at-risk children were then referred to special mental health clinicians,
management plans were drawn up for each of them, and social workers were
given professional help from psychologists to monitor their progress.
Nearly two-thirds of the 1100 boys and girls referred on to the
programme had been the subject of at least one abuse notification in the
past and a third had attempted suicide before.
Leah Haines
31 October 2004
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/storydisplay.cfm?storyID=3605699&thesection=news&thesubsection=general
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