Men in construction, women creatives most at risk for suicide: Report

Suicide rates were highest among men who worked in construction or extraction (oil rigging, mining) jobs and women who worked in arts, design, entertainment, sports and media, the report found.

Following construction and extraction jobs, the jobs with the highest risk of suicide for men were those in the arts, design, entertainment, sports and media, as well as installation, maintenance and repair. For women, arts, design, entertainment, sports and media were followed by protective service and health care support.

The study, published in the CDC’s Morbidity and Mortality Weekly, looked at suicide rates by occupation within a group of 22,053 people, ages 16 to 64, in 17 participating states between 2012 and 2015. The authors note in their summary that the results are not nationally representative.

(MORE: National Suicide Prevention Week: What you can do to prevent suicide)

During that time, suicide rates rose the sharpest among men working in arts, design, entertainment, sports and media, and among women working in food preparation and service-related occupations, the CDC study found.

“Increasing suicide rates in the U.S. are a concerning trend that represent a tragedy for families and communities, and impact the American workforce,” said Dr. Deb Houry, director of the CDC’s National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, in a press release.

The study noted that suicide rates increased across many occupational groups in the four years that were studied, and said that factors that contribute to suicide aren’t limited exclusively to problems a person may have with his or her job.

(MORE: Resources for Suicide Prevention, Mental Illness Concerns, Helping Parents Cope)

Men in construction, women creatives most at risk for suicide: Report

Zach Gibson/Getty Images, FILEHouse Minority Whip Steny Hoyer gestures while speaking to reporters on Nov. 6, 2018 in Washington.

“Usually stressful situations converge with decreased ability to tolerate distress, which leads a person to feel hopeless,” psychiatrist Dr. Colette Poole-Boykin told ABC News.

The relationship between suicide and occupation might also be “confounded by access to lethal means on the job and socioeconomic factors such as lower income and education,” the study’s authors reported. The study did not, however, look deeper into these factors.

The CDC said that the new information may help workplace leaders better focus their prevention programs and policies. For high-stress jobs, these efforts may already be in place, Poole-Boykin said, noting that “it would be wise to seek professional help when discontentment causes problems with [someone’s] mood.”

“People who are contemplating suicide often have changes in their mood, as well as the way they talk and behave,” Poole-Boykin said.

(MORE: Inside the LAPD’s special unit trying to prevent officer suicides)

Common signs, in addition to verbally expressing suicidal thoughts, include a person expressing feelings of being trapped or of being a burden to others, Poole-Boykin said. A person might also feel depressed, anxious, irritable — or all three at once. He or she may lose interest in their usual hobbies or isolate themselves.

“When these warning signs are present, a person should seek mental health care as soon as possible,” Poole-Boykin said, “as it may be too difficult for the person to will themselves into a better mental state.”

Sourse: abcnews.go.com

Men in construction, women creatives most at risk for suicide: Report

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