By Jessica Longbottom
Suicide rates among young Australians are at their highest level in 10 years, despite a range of prevention strategies and investment from government, according to new research.
The report, carried out by youth mental health service Orygen, has found the system is not working and a new suicide prevention strategy for young people is needed.
Jo Robinson, head of Orygen’s suicide prevention research, said of the current system: “We’re clearly not getting things right.
“We really lack national leadership when it comes to youth suicide prevention.”
“So despite a lot of investment, despite a lot of talk at government level … we really need a reinvigorated approach to youth suicide prevention.”
The report highlighted that although suicide rates among young men were still higher than women, female suicide rates had doubled over the past 10 years.
It also found youth suicides were twice as likely to happen in clusters than adult suicides and that Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander youth and youth in regional and remote Australia were most at risk.
In one cluster that was identified, 21 young people had taken their lives in a remote town in central Queensland between 2010 and 2012.
Fifteen young people died by suicide in a remote northern West Australian town in the same period.