Showing posts with label suicide. Show all posts
Showing posts with label suicide. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 28, 2020

GUNS AND THE TRAGEDY OF SUICIDE

 Kwei--Wednesday

We often think of guns in the context of hurting or killing others, but in fact in the USA, suicide deaths by firearm are more common than any other category of gun death (including homicide) among both males and females and across most age categories. Males account for more than 85% of all gun deaths, regardless of intent category. 

(Image: andriano.cz / Shutterstock) 


Suicide claims the lives of 23,000 Americans every year, including 1100 children and teens. Nearly two-thirds of all gun deaths in the US are suicides, which is an average of 63 deaths a day, about the same number as the fatalities in the Las Vegas mass shooting.



(Centers of Disease Control & Prevention / RCraig09)


The pie-chart view is another way to look at it:

 



The Global Perspective


The USA leads the world in gun-related suicides. 

                                                                                  



Although the USA ranked fourth in the world in 2016 with 12,400 firearm-related homicides, that figure pales in comparison with its 23,800 gun suicides. None of the other 194 nations and territories in the report came close; India ranked second at 13,400. It should be noted that in 2016, the highest per capita suicide rate by firearm was recorded by Greenland at 22 deaths per 100,000. Greenland is beset with challenges such as social turmoil and alcoholism.


Gun Ownership And Suicide Risk

A large and influential study in The New England Journal of Medicine found an elevated risk of suicide among a large sample of first-time handgun owners. Stanford University researchers followed over 26 million men and women in California who were 21 and older and who hadn’t owned guns before October 2004. A little less than 3% of the cohort, or 676,425 people, became gun owners between then and 2016. In this group, the risk of suicide in this group was about nine times higher than among non-owners. 

Those who died by suicide using a firearm — 6,691 people out of 17,894 total suicides (37.4%) — tended to be male, white, and of middle age (mean age of 41 years). The period after gun purchase that had the highest suicide risk was 1 - 3 years. A firearm was used in 89% of the suicides among handgun owners and 33% of those among nonowners.

Two notable findings emerged in this rigorous study: first, new handgun ownership is strongly associated with suicide immediately following California’s 10-day waiting period between purchase and acquisition of a firearm; second, although the absolute risk of suicide is higher among men than among women, new handgun ownership is associated with a disproportionately greater increase in death by suicide among women.

The one-purpose device

Suicide by gun is a particularly violent and heart-wrenching mode of death. Imagine the horror of coming home to find one of your loved ones dead from a fatal, self-inflicted gunshot wound. This is the kind of image that will haunt a person for years. To me, the revulsion I have for a firearm is that it's an instrument singularly-purposed for a single deadly purpose. People jump off bridges, but that's not why bridges were built; rope can be used to hang oneself, but that's not the primary use of a rope; you can slash your wrist with a razor or knife, but they weren't made for that reason. You can OD on opioids, but their original purpose is otherwise. But a gun? There are no two ways. If you point a loaded pistol at your head and fire, it will do its only assigned job.

Morality of Suicide

There is philosophical, psychological, and moral debate about suicide. Is it actually immoral or wrong in some other way? Is it selfish? People often cite the severe blow dealt to family and loved ones. Why didn't the suicide victim think about that? And anyway, isn't the phrase "suicide victim" an oxymoron?  

In considering suicide however, it's well to examine the surrounding circumstances. Perhaps suicide should be thought of not so much as an isolated act, but as the fatal and tragic (always tragic) end of a certain progression of events. In the depth of a severe depression, the self-loathing can be so intense that the sufferer completely devalues themselves. Even the persuasion that their family loves them can be quite meaningless and unhelpful, because, in any case, a suicidal person doesn't believe that. 

Why guns are the problem

Sworn NRA members often say, "Guns don't shoot people, people shoot people." This is one of the stupidest, most simplistic, circular, and self-defeating platitudes I've ever heard. The answer, of course, is, "Yes, but people can't shoot people without a gun." [Insert rolling eyes emoji here.]

Many people can get to the other side of severe depression by their own fortitude or with the support of others. With treatment, these same people will no longer want to kill themselves. Suicide is sometimes a flash decision after waxing and waning of suicidal intent. That flash decision, which could have been otherwise forestalled, is fulfilled by a gun at hand. The chance the person had to get through their dark, terrible moment is now gone for good. That's where the tragedy is, and that's why the call for gun regulation remains strong.







Thursday, March 28, 2019

Ideas

Stanley - Thursday

All writers are asked at one time or another (actually many times) where their ideas come from. My answer is that there are ideas everywhere, often too many. The trick is to find one with legs, that will sustain a whole novel, that will keep the reader (and the writer) interested from beginning to end.

Here's a story about one that got away; one that intrigued us, but we eventually discarded it. However, a recent event has brought it back into my mind. Does it have the required legs? I don't know, but my mind is whirring away.

A few years ago, Michael and I were brainstorming plot and backstory ideas for an upcoming Detective Kubu mystery. Obviously, because Kubu lives in Botswana and works for the Botswana Police Service Criminal Investigation Department, the ideas had to be pertinent to Botswana.

One of us, I don't remember who, stumbled upon a newspaper report of something that happened in 1999, quite a few years before we started the series. An Air Botswana pilot, who had been grounded because he was unable to pass his physical examination, became increasingly frustrated by his situation and decided to end his life. He did so in a way that apparently made sense to him. He stole one of Air Botswana's ATR-42 turboprop passenger planes off the apron at the Sir Seretse Khama airport in Gaborone, then flew it round for a couple of hours, buzzing the buildings and making threats to crash into the airport terminal.

1999 suicide aftermath
He also demanded to speak to the country's vice-president, Ian Khama. While officials desperately cleared the buildings, the defence force's General Tobogo Masire tried to talk the man down. Without success. Just as the pilot was about to be put through to Ian Khama, the plane ran out of fuel.

When he was told again that there were people in the terminal, the pilot decided to wreak the greatest damage he could and crashed his plane into the remaining Air Botswana's planes that were on the apron. The man died and was the only casualty. Air Botswana lost all but one of its fleet.

It's not difficult to create myriad stories from this incident. What if it wasn't suicide? What if there was a second body in the plane? What if...?  What if...? 

We eventually shelved the idea because we thought that it would be very insensitive to the family of the pilot, even though it was a decade later.

Last week, a South African born pilot who had lived in Botswana with his wife for 10 years deliberately crashed A Beechcraft 200 into the terminal at Matsieng Aerodrome just north of Gaborone. Although there are conflicting reports, it appears that his wife was attending a stork party at the airport. The man showed up uninvited and there was an altercation between him and his wife. He left, reportedly under the influence of alcohol, and drove to Sir Seretse Khama airport less than an hour away. There he stole the Beechcraft, which was on standby for medical alerts, flew it to Matsieng, and executed several low passes.

From the cockpit, he called a friend at the airport asking if his wife was there. The friend fortunately sensed that the man may try to do harm and shouted for everyone to evacuate. Minutes later the Beechcraft flew into the terminal. The pilot was the only fatality, but there was extensive property damage.





Again my mind is spinning. There are so many plot possibilities. However this time, my thoughts seem to be revolving around the sadness that surrounds any event when someone feels it necessary to takes his or her own life. What was going on in the relationship with his wife? What was going on in their heads? Were there any external pressures? Maybe other people involved? Maybe it's not even a detective story.

Will these ideas make it into a book? I don't know right now. But I'm intrigued.

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Upcoming Events

A lot of familiar names in the panels below. Very lekker!

Crimefest, Bristol, England

FRIDAY, 10 MAY
17:10 – 18:00
Sunshine Noir
* Paul Hardisty
* Barbara Nadel
* Jeffrey Siger 
* Robert Wilson 
Participating Moderator: Stan Trollip


SATURDAY, 11 MAY
11:20 – 12:10
10 Year Stretch: The CrimeFest Anthology
* Peter Guttridge 
* Caro Ramsay
* Zoë Sharp 
* Michael Stanley (aka Stanley Trollip)
Participating Moderator: Kate Ellis