King County panel calls for action to prevent teen suicides

A committee of experts convened to review child deaths in King County is calling for action to prevent suicides among teenagers, after 11 youth suicides in 2012 in the county.

  • BY Wire Service
  • Thursday, August 1, 2013 6:03pm
  • News

A committee of experts convened to review child deaths in King County is calling for action to prevent suicides among teenagers, after 11 youth suicides in 2012 in the county.

Eleven children died by suicide last year, according to the King County Medical Examiner’s office. That compares to four suicides in an average year among children younger than 18 years of age. Of those 11 suicides, five were by firearm, five by hanging, and one by jumping.

In recent years, the highest number of youth suicides in any one year had been seven, based on a review of data from 1999 to the present, according to a Thursday Public Health – Seattle & King County media release. While the numbers do not represent a statistical trend, the suicides are worrisome to county officials.

“As a community, it’s our duty to protect children from all forms of violence, including violence that is self-inflicted,” said King County Executive Dow Constantine.

“Suicide is a tragic and preventable public health problem,” said Dr. David Fleming, Director and Health Officer for Public Health – Seattle & King County. “It calls for a comprehensive approach, so that we make sure all young people get the treatment they need, and we limit access to dangers such as guns and drugs.”

The King County Child Death Review (CDR) Committee, comprised of 37 people representing numerous agencies and communities, recently reviewed in-depth the circumstances of six suicide deaths from 2012, as well as data from prior years, to make recommendations for action and future prevention.

The recommendations include:

• Increasing public awareness about the warning signs of suicide and risk factors for suicidal behavior and available crisis response resources.

• Educating families and communities about the importance and methods for safe firearm storage.

• Advocating for other methods that restrict access to lethal means, such as secure medicine return programs and safe firearm storage legislation.

• Encouraging strong implementation of House Bill 1336, which took effect July 28. It requires suicide risk and referral training for school providers and teachers, and it also requires school districts and the Office of the Superintendent of Public Instruction to develop plans to recognize and respond to troubled youth.

• Assuring medical and mental health care providers are trained to screen children for suicide and mental health risk factors and able to connect youth to resources or treatment.

The CDR committee includes members from health care, government agencies, law enforcement, fire departments, schools, community groups and others. The committee reviews the circumstances of preventable child deaths in King County, including suicides, and uses the information to take action to prevent future deaths.

“Suicide is everyone’s business,” said Victoria Wagner, Executive Director of the Youth Suicide Prevention Program, a statewide non-profit organization based in King County. “When young people and their families, teachers, health care providers, and other connected adults have the tools and skills to identify and respond to suicide risk, we can work together to save young people’s lives.”

An estimated 11,600 King County high school students (14 percent of students) indicated that in the prior 12 months they had made a plan of how to attempt suicide, according to the 2012 Healthy Youth survey data.

“Youth suicide is often an impulsive action with permanent consequences,” said Dr. Karen Milman, Prevention Division Director, Public Health – Seattle & King County. “We can help save lives by making it harder for King County youth to access lethal means, including firearms.”

For more information:

• King County Crisis Clinic at http://crisisclinic.org/

• Youth Suicide Prevention Program at http://www.yspp.org/


Talk to us

Please share your story tips by emailing editor@kentreporter.com.

To share your opinion for publication, submit a letter through our website https://www.kentreporter.com/submit-letter/. Include your name, address and daytime phone number. (We’ll only publish your name and hometown.) Please keep letters to 300 words or less.

More in News

Courtesy Photo, City of Kent
Kent city leaders to pursue state streamlined sales tax mitigation funds

Lobbying Legislature for more revenue to help uplift the Kent community

Courtesy Photo, Kent School District
Kent School District seeks applicants for vacant board position

Residents must live in District 4; board will pick replacement for Awale Farah who resigned

Appian Way Apartments, 25818 26th Pl. S., on Kent’s West Hill. COURTESY PHOTO, Apartments.com
Mercy Housing to pay for flood damages at Kent’s Appian Way Apartments

Units damaged after teen driver struck fire hydrant in parking lot

t
Kent-based Puget Sound Fire sends firefighters to combat LA wildfires

Seven firefighters part of group across the state to assist in California

t
Teen crashes into fire hydrant, floods Kent apartments

15-year-old driver reportedly moving car in parking lot when he struck hydrant

t
City of Kent opens two new roundabouts along Reith Road

Contractor wraps up construction along route between West Hill and Valley

File Photo
Death of Kent man, 61, at home in October 2024 ruled homicide

King County Sheriff’s Office says incident ‘remains an open death investigation’

t
Sound Transit light rail stations in Kent closer to completion | Photos

Vehicle testing begins as agency eyes spring 2026 opening of Federal Way Link extension

t
Kent Police bust four people for DUI on New Year’s Day

Officers arrest drivers between 1 and 5 a.m. during extra patrols following New Year’s Eve

Maleng Regional Justice Center in Kent. FILE PHOTO
Three men charged in 2023 Kent murder of 48-year-old woman

Recent witness information identifying men help lead to charges in July 2023 shooting

FILE PHOTO, Bailey Jo Josie, Sound Publishing
Chase Wilcoxson, father to Matilda, 13, and Eloise,12, places a family photo at the roadside memorial dedicated to his daughters, Buster Brown, 12, and Andrea Hudson, 38, killed in a March 19 crash.
Year in review: Kent’s top stories of 2024

A month-by-month look at several of the headlining stories.

t
Kent Reporter’s most viewed web stories of 2024

Second fatal shooting of Kent-Meridian student in three days leads the list