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Medical students encouraged to learn
signs
of suicide
Dr. and Ms. Schreck advocate for Yellow
Ribbon Suicide Prevention Program
By Richard Heck
Sometimes listening can
be the best medicine.
During a noon lecture
Dec. 9, OU-HCOM students learned about
the Yellow Ribbon Suicide Prevention
Program. The lecture, sponsored by the
Student Government Association, was
presented by
Edward
Schreck, D.O.,
assistant professor of family medicine,
and his wife, Mary.
The most important thing
to remember when encountering a suicidal
individual is to listen, Schreck said.
“People in crisis need to talk to
relieve their isolation.”
The Schrecks are deeply
and painfully familiar with the topic.
Twelve years ago, their 22-year-old son
committed suicide. “It was devastating
to our family,” Schreck told the
students as he related how a deputy
sheriff arrived at their home to break
the news.
Suicide kills more people
each year—more than 32,000 in the United
States alone—than AIDS, birth defects,
chronic lung disease or stroke. It is
the third-leading cause of death among
15- to 19-year-olds and the fastest
growing cause of death among children
aged 10 to 14.
During the past few
months, two Ohio University students and
one Logan High School student committed
suicide, Mary Schreck noted. “It hits
everybody across the board,” she said,
pointing out that one in five people
consider ending their own lives at some
point, and one in 10 will make at least
one suicide attempt.
Yellow Ribbon is a
community-based program that works with
local organizations and individuals to
empower both youths and adults with
strategies for suicide prevention. The
initiative was begun in 1994 by the
parents of Mike Emme, a Colorado teen
who killed himself, according to the
Yellow Ribbon web site. Gathering to
discuss the tragedy of losing Mike, his
friends asked Emme’s mother what they
could do. “Don’t attempt suicide,” she
said. “Even if you are at this point of
despair, please ask for help.”
Mary Schreck noted that
talking about suicide is often difficult
for people. “But we need to talk about
it out in the open and talk about
prevention,” she said. A member and
former president of the Advocates for
the Ohio Osteopathic Association, Mary
and her husband lead efforts to promote
the Yellow Ribbon Project and other
suicide prevention efforts in the
osteopathic medical profession.
Among many other
initiatives, the Yellow Ribbon Program
distributes yellow cards to teenagers
who want to help prevent their peers
from considering suicide, Mary Schreck
said. Along with the simple phrase,
“It’s ok to ask 4 help,” the cards
include a list of suicide warning signs
and toll-free telephone numbers for
suicide prevention hotlines.
“Teens will turn to their
peers before someone else, but you can
be a link to get them to someone else,”
Mary Schreck said. “This is a program
that anybody can participate in.”
While Yellow Ribbon is
aimed at teenagers, suicide prevention
methods can be applied to any
demographic. Schreck said. Suicide rates
for men increase with age, most
significantly after the age of 65, at
which point the suicide rate for men
rises to seven times that of females in
the same age group.
An estimated 750,000
people of all ages, races and
socioeconomic groups attempt suicide
each year. Learning about the causes,
warning signs and risk factors for
suicide, as well as methods for its
prevention and intervention will improve
the quality of care physicians can
offer. |