
Canada urged by group of experts to create a national suicide prevention strategy
CTV
In a letter to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, the International Association for Suicide Prevention is calling on Canada to create a national suicide prevention strategy.
In a letter to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, major party leaders and some cabinet ministers, the International Association for Suicide Prevention (IASP) is calling on Canada to create a national suicide prevention strategy.
The letter was signed by 121 leading experts from 30 countries as members of the Partnerships for Life Global Initiative to Prevent Suicide and was endorsed by the Canadian Association for Suicide Prevention, Suicide Prevention Ottawa and all members of the Association of Chairs of Psychiatry in Canada.
Advocates are calling on Canada "as a leading G7 nation" to become a world leader in suicide prevention by creating a national program, something only around 40 other countries in the world have.
"Suicide continues be a leading cause of death globally and the world is currently not on track to achieving the one third reduction in suicide mortality rates as laid out in the UN Sustainable Development Goals," an IASP release stated.
In the letter, experts stressed the importance of "a co-ordinated cross-sectoral strategy, led at the federal level," to address the nuanced challenges surrounding suicide prevention.
"We are hopeful that this call will add momentum to Canadian efforts to enhance existing support for suicide prevention like the recent three-digit (988) national crisis line number," Dr. Mark Sinyor, associate professor at the University of Toronto and associate scientist at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, said in the release.
The IASP says more than 4,000 Canadians die by suicide every year and evidence suggests a national program is the "optimal" prevention method, with research indicating countries with a suicide prevention program often have lower suicide rates than those that don't.
