DEPRESSION
and low self- esteem are fuelling a
dramatic rise in suicides among teenage
girls in Scotland, a government-funded
study has revealed.
The
suicide rate among young women aged 15-24
has risen more rapidly than in any other
group.
The alarming
trend is exposed in a study by academics
at Glasgow
University, which shows that the
number of suicides has risen to nearly two
a week — a rise of almost 50% over the
past 20 years.
Leading
academics and children’s campaigners are
calling for urgent government action to
tackle the problem, which they believe is
fuelled by pressure on young women to
conform to images of female perfection in
teenage magazines.
A recent
survey of 2,000 teenage girls in Britain
found that 70% dislike their faces and
only 8% are happy with their body.
Two-thirds think their lives would improve
dramatically if they lost weight. Most
said they were made to feel bad about
their bodies by images of “perfect”
celebrities.
The issue
will also be raised with ministers by NASUWT
Scotland, the country’s largest
teachers’ union, which is concerned that
exam pressure may be causing some teenage
girls to take their own lives.
“While
mortality has decreased over a 20-year
period for females, there are significant
increases in younger age groups and the
majority are due to suicide,” said Kate
Levin, who led the study by the university’s
social and public health sciences unit.
“If you
compare female suicides with men, you’ll
find numbers are lower but increasing at a
faster rate in younger age groups. I think
it’s being missed because people focus
on male suicides as being the major
problem.”
Maggie
Mellon, director of the charity Children
1st, added: “We need to know what
kind of young women are committing suicide
and what their circumstances are because
it’s clearly an issue the executive and
health department will have to take note
of.
“The
executive will have to tackle an emerging
vulnerability among young women. There’s
been a lot of fuss about teenage
magazines, there’s a relentless pressure
on girls to look sexy and be clever.”
The study
— which will be published in the Journal
of Social Science and Medicine in June
— also shows that the number of men who
commit suicide in Scotland has risen by
37% over the past two decades.
Those
most at risk are aged between 20 to 24 and
live in rural areas, where the most common
methods of suicide are hanging,
strangulation and poisoning. Between 1981
and 2001, the number of men who took their
own lives each year rose from 472 to 646.
The
extent of the problem was highlighted
recently by a spate of suicides in the
Highland fishing village of Cromarty where
four men have hanged themselves in the
past year.
Earlier
this month, Martin Morrison, 19, hanged
himself from the joists of a pontoon in
Cromarty harbour. His body was found by a
passer-by.
His death
followed those of Mark Thow, 40, who
committed suicide in April 2004, Ivor
Robertson, 35, who was found dead at his
home two weeks later, and Richard
Burnside, 36, who committed suicide last
August.
| The
three men were friends and
played for the same amateur
football team.
The
apparently motiveless deaths
have shocked the tight-knit
community. Suicide clusters
are thought to occur in
small communities where one
death can prompt others at a
low ebb to take their own
lives.
Government
figures show rural areas
have the highest suicide
rates in the country — the
national average for
Scotland is 21 deaths per
100,000 compared with 29 in
the Highlands and Shetland
Isles, 27 in West
Dubartonshire and 26 in the
Western Isles. More than 50
people killed themselves in
the Highlands last year.
In
2003, 560 people — 413 men
and 147 women — died from
“intentional self-harm”.
Preliminary figures for 2004
indicate that the death toll
will rise further despite a
pledge by ministers to
reduce Scotland’s suicide
rate by 20% between 2003 and
2013.
Neil
Gillies, spokesman for the
Highlands and Islands
Support Group for Grieving
Families, said: “The
authorities have to take
this increase on board. We
feel more can be done to
establish why this is
happening. Families need
answers.”
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