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Suicide prevention

The Fifth National Mental Health and Suicide Prevention Plan (the Plan) describes the personal impact of suicide in Australia as profound, with a significant impact on families, communities and society as a whole.

Overview

The Fifth National Mental Health and Suicide Prevention Plan described the personal impact of suicide in Australia as profound, with a significant impact on families and communities and society as a whole. Evidence suggests the benefits of combining suicide prevention strategies into an integrated, systems-wide approach, recognising that multiple concurrent strategies are like to generate greater effects than separate implementation of individual strategies. Chapter twelve of Planning for Wellbeing is focused on a systems approach to suicide prevention.

Facts and figures

Suicide remains the leading cause of death for Australians aged between 15 and 44 years.

Suicide rates among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Australians are at least twice that of non-Indigenous Australians.

Suicide attempts are 3 times more likely for people who identify as LGBTI+ than for the general population

For each life lost to suicide, the impacts are felt by up to 135 people, including family members, work colleagues, friends, first responders at the time of death

Men are 3 times more likely to die as a result of suicide than women.

49.2% of Queenslanders who died by suicide between 2002 and 2011 had at least 1 diagnosable mental illness and 1 in 4 had consulted a health professional about their mental health in the 3 months before they took their own life

Get involved

If you would like to know more about Planning for Wellbeing, or if you’re interested in getting involved, please drop us a line – we’d love to hear from you.