News: Pandemic unveils growing suicide crisis for communities of color

CDI Strategies - Volume 15, Issue 34

The suicides of more than 100 Black residents in Illinois last year has led locals to call for new prevention efforts focused on Black communities. In 2020, during the pandemic's first year, suicides among white residents decreased compared with previous years, while they increased among Black residents, HealthLeaders reported.

But this is not a local problem. Nor is it limited to the pandemic. Interviews with a dozen suicide researchers, data collected from states across the country, and a review of decades of research revealed that suicide is a growing crisis for communities of color — one that plagued them well before the pandemic and has only been exacerbated since.

Overall suicide rates in the U.S. decreased in 2019 and 2020. National and local studies attribute the trend to a drop among white Americans, who make up the majority of suicide deaths. Meanwhile, rates for Black, Hispanic and Asian Americans — though lower than their white peers — continued to climb in many states. (Suicide rates have been consistently high for Native Americans.)

"COVID created more transparency regarding what we already knew was happening," said Sonyia Richardson, a licensed clinical social worker who focuses on serving people of color and an assistant professor at the University of North Carolina-Charlotte, where she researches suicide. When you put the suicide rates of all communities in one bucket, "that bucket says it's getting better and what we're doing is working," she said. "But that's not the case for communities of color."

Although the suicide rate is highest among middle-aged white men, young people of color are emerging as particularly at risk. Research shows Black children younger than 13 die by suicide at nearly twice the rate of white children and, over time, their suicide rates have grown even as rates have decreased for white children. Among teenagers and young adults, suicide deaths have increased more than 45% for Black Americans and about 40% for Asian Americans in the seven years ending in 2019. Other concerning trends in suicide attempts date to the '90s, HealthLeaders reported.

"We're losing generations," said Sean Joe, a national expert on Black suicide and a professor at Washington University in St. Louis. "We have to pay attention now because if you're out of the first decade of life and think life is not worth pursuing, that's a signal to say something is going really wrong."

Editor’s note: This article was adapted from an article posted by HealthLeaders. ACDIS coverage of other social determinants of health issues can be found here. The ACDIS Diversity and Inclusion Task Force strives to make CDI a community that embodies social responsibility through promoting a positive environment of greater diversity and inclusion across all cultures, races, ethnicities, sexual orientations, gender identities, ages, and educational backgrounds, to break the silence that accompanies discrimination and inequity, and to ensure that all feel valued, empowered, and welcomed. Information on the Diversity and Inclusion Task Force can be found here. Email questions or thoughts for the Task Force to ACDIS Editor Carolyn Riel at criel@acdis.org.

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