Friday, March 21, 2014

TOW #22: "The Neglected Suicide Epidemic" by Emily Greenhouse

     Six years ago, a man named Jonny Benjamin walked over to the Waterloo Bridge in London, and prepared to end his life. He was diagnosed with schizophrenia, and he had assumed that his life was never going to get better. However, things changed when a stranger (later found to be named Neil Laybourn) walked up to him and told him that everything was going to be okay. Benjamin did not jump, stating: "When he came along it burst the bubble of that world I was in. I felt faith, like I could talk to him." Such instances occur many times a day, but unfortunately most of the time there is no Neil Laybourn involved, and those who are in trouble stay trapped in their own "bubble." Emily Greenhouse's article "The Neglected Suicide Epidemic" was written in order to raise public awareness of growing mental health issues and remind everyone that they can make a difference in one person's life.
     Greenhouse supports her argument that everyone should take action in the so-called "suicide epidemic" by employing anecdotes. Along with Benjamin's story, Greenhouse wrote about Jerome Motto, a California doctor who tried several times to have suicide barriers erected on the Golden Gate Bridge, the world's leading suicide location. Motto mentioned that in the 1970s, he had visited the apartment of a suicide victim and found a note that read, "I'm going to walk to the bridge. If one person smiles at me on the way, I won't jump." This inclusion reminds Greenhouse's audience that they–ordinary people–can make a huge difference in one person's life: they can have the same effect on one person that Neil Laybourn had on Jonny Benjamin.
     Greenhouse also supports her argument by incorporating data and statistics in her article. She notes that in America, the suicide rates in middle-aged men and women have increased by 30% in the last decade, and that suicide has replaced car accidents in the number one injury-related cause of death. She states that this is not just an issue in the United States: 90% of those who attempt suicide in developing countries battle psychological ailments that do have cures. These facts and figures emphasize the horrifying truth that suicide is a rising health concern, but they also do the job of reminding the public that these maladies do have remedies, and that they can even help in finding these cures.

(Article and picture source here)

No comments:

Post a Comment