ABSTRACT
Background
Suicide is an enduring, worldwide public health issue and recent evidence demonstrates a decrease in sex ratio of suicide. New evidence suggests that cultural and socioeconomic, digital and technological shifts (e.g., digital isolation, changing gender norms and urbanisation) modify suicide ideation and behaviour. Men are still less likely to seek psychiatric treatment (for reasons related to cultural stigma) in the context of rising risk; and young women, for their part, experience converging vulnerabilities that have been linked with declines in mental health and societal expectation.
Objective
This paper addresses the gender gap in suicide prevention by drawing attention to neglected areas of care and calling for age-appropriate, integrated multimodal clinical, social and cultural interventions.
Content
Based on recent studies, the paper discusses the pressing necessity to transfer suicide trends into context more than diagnostic availability. Concepts such as low psychiatric utilisation, service utilisation barriers and the need for validation of therapeutic experiences are specifically discussed. A trisectional prevention model including clinic services, peer and digital outreach programs, as well as a culturally informed psychoeducation component is offered. Mental health professionals are strategically placed as key intermediaries who can connect health with education, labour and family assistance to create an integrated continuum of care.
Implications
Our analysis highlights that a successful prevention of suicides has to be multi-faceted and consider age- and gender-specificity. Combining clinical, community-based and digital approaches offers potential to increase outreach, reduce stigma and promote engagement across communities. Enabling mental health professionals as front-line co-actors will also add the sustainability and inculturation of actions within social systems.
Conclusion
Tackling the gender gap in terms of suicide prevention requires creative, culture-sensitive and age-adjusted solutions. Integrating clinical expertise with peer networks and intersectional collaboration will make suicide prevention efforts more equitable, effective and sustainable.