Common Sense September/October 2021

Page 28

Stop Stigmatizing Suicide

COMMITTEE REPORT WELLNESS

Loice A. Swisher, MD MAAEM FAAEM

C

ommit suicide.

I finch with these words. It takes great effort to contain a wince as those words hit my ear. There is a visceral pain like a punch to the gut. No matter my prior personal sense of comfort, it falters. I’m sure the feeling is common for so many who have had friends or family who have killed themselves or who have had personal thoughts of suicide.

“ Commit suicide. I flinch with these words.”

My pained mind wanders…. • I wonder if the person saying these words realizes often the immediate subliminal message of a crime or sin to those who have suffered with suicide loss or suicidal ideation. • I wonder if the person saying these words actually believe that suicide is a crime or a sin. • I wonder if the person saying these words is aware they are dividing suicide from all other causes of death. After all, there is no other committed death. Commit makes suicide different; perhaps subtlety implying suicide is unchangeable. • I wonder if the words tumble out of their mouth without thought— as automatic as ‘peanut butter and jelly’ or ‘black and white.’ • I wonder if the person just doesn’t know another way or does and continues to say ‘commit suicide’ anyway. I wonder if they know it hurts. There are other ways to say this. The words are less automatic. They may sound strange to the ear. However, it is easy, and it is free. Instead, use the same terms that are used with cancer, car accident, and heart attacks: died by (or from) suicide. When Anthony Bourdain and Kate Spade died by suicide in 2018 the media was widely watched on how the news was covered. Since then, the media guidelines are widely employed. Once made aware, one can now see that the use of ‘commit suicide’ is less used in the headlines. As emergency physicians, we tend to believe we can talk about and treat all emergencies. However, this is much less true of the American suicide health crisis. We can start by choosing other words-less divisive language. For National Physician Suicide Awareness Day commit to ending stigmatizing language with suicide. Commit to ‘died by suicide’.

28

COMMON SENSE SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2021

“ We can start by choosing other words-less divisive language.”


Articles inside

Job Bank

9min
pages 50-52

Board of Directors Meeting Summary: September

1min
page 49

Book Review: A Look at Our Tribe

5min
pages 47-48

Medical Student Council Chair’s Message: How to Become an Expert in Marketing Just in Time for Application and Interview Season

3min
page 46

Resident Journal Review: Phenobarbital for the Management of Alcohol Withdrawal Syndrome

13min
pages 43-45

AAEM/RSA Editor: AAEM/RSA Chair Introduction

2min
page 42

Perspective: Escaping Our Burnout Crisis

4min
pages 38-40

AAEM/RSA President: Hello Everyone

2min
page 41

“…And I took the road [far too much] traveled.”

5min
pages 36-37

WiEM Awards

5min
pages 34-35

Mind the Gap – Utilizing the pCO2 Gap in Shock Resuscitation

12min
pages 30-33

Leadership Lessons for Emergency Physicians

18min
pages 17-21

Housing is Health Care: How the COVID-19 Pandemic Could Change the Way We Address Homelessness in the ED

6min
pages 26-27

My First Press Conference

2min
page 29

President’s Message: Perception is Everything

11min
pages 3-5

Legislators in the News: An Interview with Representative Troy A. Carter, Sr

9min
pages 8-10

The Elderly ED Patient Who Falls, are We Making STRIDEs in Their Treatment?

7min
pages 22-25

Stop Stigmatizing Suicide

1min
page 28

From the Editor’s Desk: The Emergency Physician as Plaintiff

9min
pages 6-7
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.