UAE Press: Challenge Of Youth Suicides Requires Urgent Attention

UAE Press: Challenge of youth suicides requires urgent attention

ABU DHABI, (Pakistan Point News - 21st Dec, 2019) A local newspaper has shed light on mental health in an editorial on Saturday, noting three young girls in their teens, "all three suspected of committing suicide, all occurring this month in the UAE."

"As shocking as it is, this is also a reality that the UAE has been confronting year after year," the Gulf news added, noting, "Worldwide too, youth suicides are on the increase."

The English language daily went on to quote a report released this year by the United States' Centres for Disease Control and Prevention, which noted suicide rates for persons aged 10-24 increased 56 percent from 2007 to 2017 in the United States.

"According to the World Health Organisation, WHO," the paper continued, "the regional trend of depression is highest in the UAE, at 5.1 percent of the population."

It added, "This is beyond worrying. It is a challenge that needs urgent attention."

"The triggers for suicidal thoughts among some young people are many and can range from pressures of studies, family problems to self-esteem challenges induced by social media and peer pressures.

"And as mental health experts have stressed time and again, the triggers do not emerge overnight. The distress signals are emitted over weeks, perhaps months, and parents and schools must be uncompromisingly vigilant, and keenly tuned, to react to them at the very first instance," said the Dubai-based daily.

The UAE paper went on to say, "As mental experts in the UAE emphasise, parents and schools must necessarily establish a very low threshold to spot the red flags, or signs of distress. In other words, even the smallest of signs must be attended to, if need be by seeking professional help, rather than attributing the teen’s unusual behaviour to the blanket reason of hormonal teenage mood swings, as is the wont in many corners of society. As a preventive measure, the value of such parental vigilance is incalculable. It can, literally, make the difference between life and death.

"Suicide, irrespective of the age of the individual who commits it, is inarguably an outcome of a mental health problem and in the young, it demands an unflagging attention as the young are not fully capable of understanding or controlling their mental impulses and vulnerabilities. In all of the cases in the UAE of teenagers who jumped off high-rises or otherwise ended their lives, the sub-text as it emerged was of unresolved mental issues.

"Would there have been a different outcome for these teenagers had the red flags been spotted in time by their parents, schools? The sooner such questions are prevented from ending up as rhetoric, as afterthoughts, the more hope there will be for teenagers in distress," the paper concluded.