December 9, 2005
Major study of Nunavut
suicides seeks in-depth information from people left behind
"You tend to be
haunted by the idea that you should have done something"
JOHN
THOMPSON
Gustavo
Turecki of McGill University's Suicide Group visited Iqaluit last week to prepare
for the most comprehensive suicide study ever done in Nunavut, which will stretch
over several years. Community interviews begin in January. (PHOTO BY JOHN THOMPSON)
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The most comprehensive
study of suicide in Nunavut has begun.
The study, which will span
several years and include every community in the territory, aims to answer one
big question: Why?
There's no shortage of
theories and ideas about why young Inuit men choose to take their lives. But
there's little hard data to back these ideas up, according to Jack Hicks, an
Iqaluit consultant who will carry out extensive interviews for the study.
Interviews will be conducted
with parents, friends and others who knew the deceased. For every suicide investigated,
the study will also seek someone who attempted suicide from the same age group,
sex and community. And it will also seek to find someone who never attempted
suicide who fits those same categories.
Researchers hope these
interviews will help them piece together a complete psychological profile of
people who die by suicide. They also hope to better understand the differences
between those who complete a suicide, and those who do not.
Suicide cases included
in the study begin from January 1, 2003, and will continue for the next few
years while the study is underway. The study aims to capture the full stories
of 100 suicide victims.
Interviews have already
begun in Iqaluit, and community visits will begin in the New Year.
Leading the study is Gustavo
Turecki, a psychiatrist who runs the McGill Group for Suicide Studies. He visited
Iqaluit last week to meet with the study's reference group, which includes Lori
Idlout of the Embrace Life Council, Akitsiraq law graduate Sandra Inutiq, and
Anglican minister Methuselah Kunuk, all from Iqaluit.
The chair of the national
Inuit Youth Council, Jason Tologanak, will also participate with the reference
group by telephone from Cambridge Bay.
The reference group will
help ensure that Inuit culture is incorporated into the study and the right
kinds of questions are asked, Turecki said.
"If you ask the wrong
questions, your answers are no good," he said.
Participation in the study's
interviews is voluntary, but Lori Idlout says she's encouraging community members
to be open-minded and to help with the study.
And from Terecki's experience,
most families find talking about their loss therapeutic. "It really helps
to bring them closure," he said.
"You tend to feel
very guilty about it. You tend to be haunted by the idea that you should have
done something that you didn't do."
This kind of study is known
as a follow-back study, or a psychological autopsy. It considers the victim's
overall trajectory in life, from cradle to grave, as well as many specific factors
leading up to their death, like the state of their relationships and employment,
as well as psychological states like impulsive behavior, aggressiveness and
dependency on drugs.
Only several follow-back
studies of this size and thoroughness have been conducted.
One large follow-back study
conducted in Finland during the 1980s concluded that most people who died by
suicide in that country first tried to seek help from health workers, but slipped
through cracks in the system. The study led to changes in how front-line health
workers diagnosed patients, and about five years later, suicide numbers dropped
by about 20 per cent.
A similar one-year study
was also conducted in New Brunswick by Turecki, who recommended policy changes
in that province.
There were 27 suicides
in Nunavut last year, and a record 37 the year before. In comparison, there
have only been 22 suicides this year, which makes the territory's chief coroner,
Tim Neily, hopeful that 2005 could be the best year yet.
"It's really the wrong
word to use. Twenty-two is still a huge number," he said.
Two related projects will
be done in connection with the Nunavut follow-back study: a "resiliency
study" in five communities across Canada, to determine what characteristics
cause aboriginals who attempted suicide to survive, as well as a "knowledge
transfer," which aims to ensure results are shared with the communities
being studied.
All projects are funded
with $1.5 million from the Canadian Institute for Health Research.
The follow-back study has
11 partners, including the Embrace Life Council, RCMP, Government of Nunavut
and Nunavut Tunngavik Inc.
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