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Black Suicide Survey Finds Faith, Family Keep Rate Low
Author: Aparna Surendran
Originally Published In The Philadelphia Inquirer, July 2002   DOWNLOAD PDF



African Americans suffer higher rates than whites of 
almost every disease and cause of death. Except one: 
suicide. 

New research shows that support from friends, family and 
faith provides a powerful buffer against suicide in the 
black community, especially among those 65 and older, the 
age group with the highest suicide rate in the nation. 

"One of the most exciting things about this study is that 
there are protective factors like religious faith and 
social support," said Joan Cook, lead author of the study 
and a psychologist at the University of Pennsylvania and 
the Philadelphia Veterans Affairs Medical Center. 

According to the latest statistics from the Centers for 
Disease Control and Prevention, suicide rates among senior 
citizens are highest for those who are divorced or 
widowed. For that age group, the rate of suicide among 
white men is nearly three times greater than for African 
American men, and almost seven times more than for white 
women. 

Beulah Otey, 74, of North Philadelphia, was in a Bible 
study class at the Lehigh Senior Center when her husband 
died a few years ago. After his death, she said, she 
continued to rely on the Bible and her Christian faith to 
sustain her. 

"I never let go of my religion," she said. "I kept the 
faith." 

In many ways, she is emblematic of the respondents in 
Cook's latest research. 

The study, published in the July-August issue of the 
American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry, found that older 
African Americans who have religious and spiritual beliefs 
and support from family and the community are much less 
inclined to attempt suicide. 

Researchers interviewed 835 African American senior 
citizens who lived in a Baltimore public housing 
development. The residents were asked questions to not 
only determine whether they were candidates for suicide, 
but also to plumb the extent of religion and family and 
social networks in their lives. 

Almost 97 percent of those interviewed did not have an 
inclination toward suicide. About 3 percent did. 
Approximately 91 percent of those not suicidal said 
religion and social support were important in their lives. 
In the suicidal group, about 67 percent said the same. 

Cook said the difference was "significant." 

Experts on suicide concur with the results of the study. 

"I'm not sure if it is a belief in God or a social 
connectedness that a faith community provides, but they 
are protective factors," said Mark Kaplan, associate 
professor of community health at Portland (Ore.) State 
University. 

Seniors generally turn to suicide because of depression, 
chronic illness, and a sense of abandonment, Kaplan said. 
Depression can be particularly debilitating because they 
often cannot afford mental-health care, he said, because 
of Medicare's limitations. 

Cook said the next step was for researchers and clinicians 
to address those problems. 

"[These] mental disorders often go unrecognized and 
untreated," she said. "We have to understand and help meet 
their needs." 

Experts speculate that white men may have higher suicide 
rates not only because of cultural differences but because 
of greater access to firearms. 

Historically, suicide has been seen by African Americans 
as a white option, not a black one, said Donna Holland 
Barnes, president and cofounder of the National 
Organization of People of Color Against Suicide. 

Barnes, a sociology professor, began her suicide research 
after her son, Marc Jamal, 20, took his life by driving 
his car into a Massachusetts river in 1990. 

"Unfortunately, in our community, we looked at suicide not 
as an illness but as a weakness," Barnes said. 

"It was the way we were raised. We had to get hope to get 
out of slavery. The Bible was the only thing we could 
depend on. 

"Church is someplace where many African Americans can gain 
power. It gives them a reason to get up in the morning," 
Barnes said. "It gives them a sense of responsibility. 
Once you know you are needed and have a sense of 
responsibility, you think of others and not just 
yourself." 

Among local African Americans, the study's findings were 
not surprising. Family, community, religion, and even the 
struggle for equality were mentioned as suicide deterrents 
by people at two senior centers, the Lehigh Center at 17th 
Street and Lehigh Avenue, and the Spring Garden Center at 
12th and Spring Garden Streets. 

Palmer Lee Warren, 90, said: "[Through history], our 
people caught hell. Everything was against them. When 
[that happens], we come together and develop a strength." 

Mary McMillian, 74, said: "The African American has always 
been under stress. They had to learn to cope with that 
stress." 

Between older black men and women, the latter have a much 
lower rate of suicide. 

"Black women have to take care of their families," Crippen 
said. "They have no time to think about suicide." 

The method used for attempting suicide is a big reason for 
the higher suicide rate among men, Kaplan said. 

Guns are more likely to be used by men, especially white 
men, he said, while women use less violent methods. In 
fact, more women nationwide attempt suicide, but more men 
succeed. 


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