Global Suicide Rate Has Fallen 36% Since 2000, WHO Study Finds
The largest sustained drop on record is credited to means restriction, mental health investment and reduced pesticide access in South Asia.
The global suicide rate has fallen by 36 percent since 2000, according to a new WHO analysis — the largest sustained drop ever recorded for a public health metric of this kind.
Researchers credit multiple factors: restrictions on access to certain pesticides in South Asia, national mental health investment in wealthy countries, and expanded crisis-support infrastructure in dozens of urban areas.
India, once responsible for one of the largest national totals, has seen a decline of nearly 40 percent, driven partly by regulations restricting the sale of highly toxic agricultural chemicals commonly used in impulsive self-poisoning.
The report notes that suicide remains a leading cause of death among young people in many countries, and that reductions have been uneven — with slight increases recorded in some high-income nations.
Public health specialists have long known that means restriction — reducing lethal access during moments of crisis — is one of the most effective and least discussed prevention tools.
"The story is rarely told," one epidemiologist said. "But hundreds of thousands of lives have been extended over the past two decades by measures that look mundane on paper."
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