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Increasing number of suicides by Iowa men 75 or older raises concerns
By Rana Mousafa, Iowa Watch
Feb. 18, 2015 12:00 am
The number of suicides among men 75 years or older has increased to the highest level in more than a decade. And federal data indicate that the rate is likely to worsen.
Despite this bleak picture, the problem is receiving little attention among policy makers as well as the general public, Iowans dealing with elderly suicides said.
'I speculate that as people get older, they get more invisible,' said John Westefeld, a professor of counseling psychology at the University of Iowa College of Education.
Westefeld said people in the mental health community need to step up their efforts to meet the needs of older adults.
Thirty-seven Iowa men 75 years or older took their lives in 2013, exceeding the annual average by almost 50 percent, data from the Iowa Department of Health showed. Data for 2014 have not been compiled. Within this group, 18 men were 85 and older when they killed themselves, almost tripling the previous year's number and surpassing any previous year since 1999, according to the state data.
The years 2011 and 2009 were next highest since 1999, with 14 and 13 suicides, respectively.
Polly Carver-Kimm, Iowa Department of Public Health communications director, cautioned against declaring a trend based on one year's statistics as the numbers are small statistically.
But the growth of Iowa's aging population is trending upward. The U.S. Census Bureau projects that, in six years, only North Dakota will have a higher percentage of people 85 or older than Iowa.
Moreover, federal data suggests the potential for problems is likely to get worse in that group of men 75 or older, whose numbers are expected to rise 53 percent by 2030 to 133,860.
These suicide numbers for male Iowans 75 and older brought the death toll to 381 for the past decade and a half. That equates to a rate of 3 suicides per 10,000 people in that age range, data IowaWatch analyzed revealed.
'These issues will become ever so much more important as we have many more-older adults reaching both late life as well as surviving serious and chronic medical illnesses,' said Susan Schultz, a professor of psychiatry and internal medicine at the University of Iowa Carver College of Medicine and president of the American Geriatrics Association.
Schultz, who is president of the American Geriatrics Association, and Westefeld, who has been working suicide prevention for 35 years, said the problem needs more attention.
'We need to find ways to reach them and provide the care that they need even when they are not always willing to ask for it,' Schultz said.
Westefeld suggested educational workshops on suicide among older adults in nursing homes.
According to the Iowa Department of Public Health's most recent suicide data, Linn County had the fourth highest in the state in all age groups, at 1.62 per 10,000 residents.
Explanations for the high suicide rate among men over 85 vary widely, but most relate to adjusting to a new reality imposed by aging.
Schultz said medical disability and social isolation are two of the key factors. Men over 80 frequently lose the ability to walk safely, drive safely, and live alone, she said.
Kurth identified possible risk factors that include mental illness, lack of self-worth, terminal illness, depression and/or anxiety from loss of control over one's life, elder abuse, and chronic pain.
FEELING OF HOPELESSNESS
Frank Judisch, a 77-year-old retired ophthalmologist from University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics in Iowa City, said he suffers from what he describes as 'chronic recurring depression' and identifies with some of those factors during his occasional bouts with suicidal thoughts.
'Everything looks totally hopeless, totally worthless, totally useless,' he said.
Judisch said accumulating interest to keep going becomes difficult because opportunities for social interactions diminish.
'No one likes to live in isolation. So what is there to live for? You don't have friends, you don't have things to motivate you, and you don't have a reason to get up in the morning,' he said.
His wife of 55 years, Susan, said her husband hasn't always been like this.
'For the most of our life, he has been very active and very busy and very interested in a million things,' she said. 'He never, when he was younger, sat around depressed.'
The Judisches, who live in Iowa City, keep in close contact with all four of his children who live in Iowa City, Chicago, and Sacramento, Calif.
Judisch said he decided against completing suicide after thinking about the stigma and grief that would be brought to his family as well as his personal uncertainty of the morality of suicide.
One of the leading causes of suicide among older adults is depression, which is often undiagnosed and/or untreated, according to the American Association of Suicidology.
Judisch was diagnosed with depression some 30 years ago but said he thinks he had it as long ago as high school. He said no one can fully grasp the feeling of depression other than the person experiencing it.
'The depth of the despair, the feeling of total hopelessness, really doesn't even exist amongst most cancer patients,' he said. 'Even the guys on death row still have that glimmer of hope, and that's gone in depression.'
SUICIDE PREVENTION
Schultz said one reason men over 80 have higher suicides rates than men in their 60s and 70s is that they have lost their wives to death or illness and have difficulty coping.
'When men are faced with taking care of a home without their wives, they are more likely to feel like a burden on society, and they can become hopeless and despondent at the thought of going to a nursing home,' she said. 'They also are less likely to seek treatment, which is one of the reason women in this age group are less likely to end their lives.'
State data show that 14.5 percent of the 248 suicides in 2013 among people 80 or older were women, even though they account for 64 percent that age group.
'Women are more likely to talk to counselors or friends and seek social support,' Schultz said. 'Men, on the other hand, tend to be more afraid to show weakness or a need for help, so they may be more likely to feel that they have nowhere to turn and end their lives.'
Schultz suggested that appropriate treatment for those in this age group dealing with widowhood and losing friends to death would include church and health center-based support groups for grieving people. She said these groups sometimes are better than counseling services because they provide more emotional support.
Schultz said older people are more likely to complete suicide than younger people because they often chose methods that complete the act, such as using a highly-lethal firearm. That could be a factor in suicides among farmers.
'Access to firearms is highly related to completed suicides,' Schultz said. 'In farming communities, large firearms are a common household item with very lethal potential.'
People over the age of 65 completed 16 percent of all suicides in the United States. Seven of every 10 suicides were completed by firearms, according to the most recent data from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Kara Graft, wellness counselor at Builders of Hope, an Iowa City-based organization that provides support to people with mental illnesses, said suicidal older adults who seek counseling usually are more reserved than younger people.
'I've observed that our older generations are much less likely to talk about their feelings or access support as it may be perceived as a sign of weakness,' she said. 'The younger generations seem to have an easier time or that it is a more normalized behavior.'
l This story was produced by Iowa Center for Public Affairs Journalism-IowaWatch.org, a non-profit, online news website that collaborates with Iowa news organizations to produce explanatory and investigative reporting.
IowaWatch data analyst/reporter Lauren Mills and IowaWatch adviser and co-founder Stephen Berry contributed to this story.
Rana Moustafa/IowaWatch Frank Judisch, 77, pets his dog Zoe during a Dec. 6, 2014, interview in his Iowa City home.

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