Skip navigation.
... Midlife Improvement

Get Our Newsletter!

Stay up to date on midlife issues -- subscribe to our monthly email newsletter (you can easily unsubscribe later)!

Email address:

Your LifeTwo

In this area, registered users see recommendations, set bookmarks, and track what their buddies are up to. For more on the benefits of registering, go here.

User login

Subscribe in a Reader:

XML feed

Use the icon above to subscribe to LifeTwo's Home Page in a reader like My Yahoo or Google Reader (see this page to learn more about RSS and for information on our other feeds). Or if you use one of the following services, just click on its icon:

Add to Google

Add to My Yahoo!

Add to My AOL


New On LifeTwo's Homepage

Recent Discussions

Netflix, Inc.

Midlife Suicide Rising; CDC says Rate Hitting 25-year High

Wesley's picture

A new five-year analysis of the nation’s death rates recently released by the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that the suicide rate of middle-aged people (45-to-54-year-olds) has surged nearly 20 percent from 1999 to 2004. This increase is larger than nearly every other age group when adjusted for population size. For middle-aged women the rate increased 31% while the suicide rate for 15-to-19 year olds increased less than 2% and those in their 20s just 1%. The suicide rate for people 65 and older actually decreased during that period.

Data collection on suicide is notoriously difficult leading to a difficulty in pinpointing causes. Theories include midlife depression (see "Middle Age is Depressing") and the enormous increase in prescription drug use. Regarding the disproportionate increase of suicide by middle-aged women, some experts have pointed at the reduction of the use of hormone replacement therapy during this same period. (It should be noted that despite the increased rate of suicide among women, middle-age suicide remains a dominantly male problem, and over all, four of five people who commit suicide are men.)

C.D.C. officials said. Epidemiologists also emphasize that at least another five years of data on suicide are needed before any firm conclusions can be reached about a trend. This means experts will continue to speculate causes but no one doubts the stresses of midlife including job/career, family, elder care, empty next, relationship issues, financial pressures, to name a few.

Source: New York Times

0
 
 

Comment viewing options

Select your preferred way to display the comments and click "Save settings" to activate your changes.
Lisa's picture

related to antidepressants?

I can't help wonder if people taking antidepressants feel more positive about suicide.

Anonymous's picture

Antidepressants lead to Suicides

The recent Swedish study showed that 52% of the female suicides in 2006 were on antidepressants. The recent British study showed that placebos work just as well and don't have the dangerous side effects.

As the director of Novus Medical Detox, I daily see the ravages caused by prescription drug addiction created by doctors prescribing it to their patients and then the patients either continuing to obtain it or purchasing these drugs on the internet or the street. Probably the worst of these drugs is OxyContin--legal heroin.

Pain is real. I have had to deal with it much of my life first from polio and then from two surgeries. However, there are alternatives to painkillers and they must be tried first. Let's not treat the symptoms but the cause.

Prescription drug addiction is an epidemic and we must do everything we can to stop it before it overwhelms us. Education is a must. Detox and rehab are the only solutions for people who are addicted and have decided that they must change their lives.

Steve Hayes
http://novusdetox.com

Wesley's picture

Lisaarata's quip

"I can't help wonder if people taking antidepressants feel more positive about suicide."

I know this isn't a funny topic but that does seem like a Steven Wright quip.

Wesley Hein
Wesley [at] lifetwo [dot] com
Sign up for the LifeTwo Newsletter!

Lisa's picture

Giving it more serious thought...

As we go along in life, for years, we might have made tiny little thought transactions like this: A neighbor of mine commits suicide when he learns he has cancer. I think, "Well, that makes sense--he just chose when to go." And then, an old childhood acquaintance takes his kid out into the mountains to scope for deer. He leaves his child sleeping in his car seat. He has custody that week. He wanders around longer than he thought to, and when he gets back he finds the child must have woken up and gotten out, because the child is gone. He dies of exposure. The father, distraught, commits suicide a few weeks later. I think, "I can understand that."

Combine it with my own shallowness. I'd never had a major problem or a major loss. My family always died when they got old. We had alcoholism but we all found various ways to get over it. I went to Al Anon for a couple of years. So, I never knew what it felt like to get that low emotionally. I never thought much about the right and wrong of suicide. I only knew I wouldn't do it because it would hurt the people I love the most.

Okay, so this last winter I got so depressed, I envied people who died. If I didn't have other modes of thinking, other resources, education or whatnot, I might have thought it was the only way to end my suffering.

So many things going on today show the emptiness of the things we counted on to keep us feeling happy. I'm glad I'm feeling better, and I just wish that people who want to kill themselves would instead be willing to kill off something in their life circumstances...or maybe make a radically different choice...or whatever they could do that they didn't think they could...that could be a beautiful thing.

Anonymous's picture

another way of dying

Suicide is another way of dying..

Post new comment

  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <strong> <b> <i> <u> <cite> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <p> <hr> <blockquote> <table> <tr> <td> <!--break-->
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.

More information about formatting options

CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.