On July16, 1997,
Jason Flatt became a statistic and part of an alarming
increase in the nation’s youth suicide rate. The
facts reveal that a silent epidemic of youth suicide is
ravaging our nation
and stealing the futures of our young people.
Suicide
ranks as the THIRD leading cause of death for ages 15-24
and FOURTH for ages 10-14.
Suicide
is the SECOND leading cause of death for our college-aged
youth, as well as for ages 15 to 19 in many states.
Each week
in our nation, we lose approximately 100+ young people to
suicide.
Even though
white males make up the majority of completed suicides, from
1980-1995, suicide among black youth ages 10-14 increased
233% and in black youth ages 15-19 suicide rates increased
126%. For black youth in the southern region of the nation,
there was an increase of 214%.
In the
past forty years, youth suicide rates have almost
tripled.
Between 1980 and 1996, suicide rates for ages 10 to 14 increased
by over 100%.
More teenagers
and young adults have died of suicide than from cancer, heart
disease, AIDS, birth defects, stroke, pneumonia and influenza,
and chronic lung disease COMBINED.
According to the NMHA, four out
of five people who attempt suicide have given clear warnings.