WJHG - Medical Minute - Headlines

Life Management Center Of NW Florida Hosts Suicide Prevention Conference

By: Alexandra Hill Email
Updated: Fri 10:25 AM, Sep 10, 2010

Panama City - This week is National Suicide Prevention Week. The Life Management Center of Northwest Florida is using the opportunity to educate mental health professionals and the public about the issue.

The center hosted a suicide prevention conference Thursday in Panama City.

"My name is Karen Abrahams. I have a 17 year old son named Alex who committed suicide on September 13 of 2007,” Abrahams said.

Almost three years to the day, Karen shared her story publicly for the first time.

"It took me well over a year before I even started remembering what the day of the week it was,” Abrahams said.

Thursday, Karen sat alongside approximately 75 others in the Panama City Holiday Inn Select, for the inaugural suicide prevention conference hosted by the life management center of Northwest Florida.

The organization’s workers can attest to the recent rise in suicide numbers.

"More calls to our 24-hour crisis line, more individuals indicating that the stress of the economy, the stress of the oil spill, just the stress across the nation, is making them a little bit more depressed and certainly people are thinking more about taking their own life,” said Ned Ailes, CEO of Northwest Florida’s Life Management Center.

In a typical week there are more than 19,000 suicide attempts nationally. This breaks down to approximately two people attempting suicide in the country every minute.

"Those time periods are shortening with the economics of today and trials and tribulations people are faced with,” said Debbie Coleman of The Jason Foundation.

Locally the numbers are even larger.

According to the medical examiner's office, in 2007, the year Karen’s son died, there were 52 suicides in the 14th judicial circuit.

That number has gone up every year since, leaving Florida with 2,000 suicides per year, the second highest number in the country.

Nationwide, Florida ranks 17th in the country.

"The important thing for people to recognize in our community is that this is a preventable death. When people talk about it, they should be taken seriously, regardless of their age,” said Ailes.

That point hit home for Margie Armstrong, a suicide survivor of 35 years.

"At the point that I decided to commit suicide I heard my children cry and I just thought I can't do this to them. And so that was the thing that was the saving piece for me in particular,” Armstrong recalled.

"You wake up every morning and say I’m here, no he's not here, but we're going to continue on,” Abrahams said.

If you know anyone that has talked about, or suggested they may take their own life, take them seriously and encourage them to seek help.

The local 24-hour crisis and counseling line is 850-522-4485.

The next suicide prevention meeting will be held Thursday, September 23, at 9:00am at the Life Management Center of Northwest Florida.


Comments are posted from viewers like you and do not always reflect the views of this station.
powered by Disqus

Medical News

  • People think they're eating less than they are, survey finds

    People may realize that fast food isn’t health food, but they don’t realize just how fattening it really is, researchers report. They surveyed people eating at 10 burger, chicken, sandwich and doughnut chains and found they greatly underestimated just how much they were chowing down.People may realize that fast food isn’t health food, but they don’t realize just how fattening it really is, researchers report. They surveyed people eating at 10 burger, chicken, sandwich and doughnut chains and found they greatly underestimated just how much they were chowing down.


  • Report questioning salt guidelines riles heart experts
    An unusual medical brawl erupted on Tuesday when the influential Institute of Medicine issued a report questioning the basis of years of advice for Americans to cut their salt intake in half.
  • Chris Christie's weight-loss procedure doesn't always work

    New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie revealed that he's had gastric-band weight-loss surgery, which experts say has the least amount of short-term risk but also yields the least amount of weight loss.New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie revealed that he's had gastric-band weight-loss surgery, which experts say has the least amount of short-term risk but also yields the least amount of weight loss.


  • Caffeinated gum raises health buzz

    A new line of caffeinated chewing gum is causing jitters among health advocates and prompting federal officials to take a new look at the proliferation of jolt-infused foods, including those marketed to children and teens.A new line of caffeinated chewing gum is causing jitters among health advocates and prompting federal officials to take a new look at the proliferation of jolt-infused foods, including those marketed to children and teens.


  • Dr. Oz's tips for losing those last 10 pounds

    Stress, the slowing of metabolism of middle age, and hormone changes after having a baby are three main reasons why many people see the numbers on the scale going up. Dr. Mehmet Oz shares tips on how to shed those final 10 pounds. Stress, the slowing of metabolism of middle age, and hormone changes after having a baby are three main reasons why many people see the numbers on the scale going up. Dr. Mehmet Oz shares tips on how to shed those final 10 pounds.


  • Anger may raise heart attack risk, study finds
    Bottling up emotions is thought to harm both mind and body, but a new study suggests that the opposite extreme may be no better.
  • Just one daily soda can raise diabetes risk
    Drinking just one 12-ounce soda a day may increase the risk of Type 2 diabetes, a new study from Europe suggests.
  • Gut bugs linked to heart attacks, strokes
    Thousands of heart attack victims every year have none of the notorious risk factors before their crisis - not high cholesterol, not unhealthy triglycerides.
  • 12 school football players die each year, study finds
    Each year in the U.S. an average of a dozen high school and college football players die during practices and games, according to a new study that finds heart conditions, heat and other non-traumatic causes of death are twice as common as injury-related ones.
  • Chelation little help for heart disease: study
    NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Removing metals from the body through a controversial treatment has little effect on the long-term health of people who've previously suffered a heart attack, according to the results of a government-funded trial released Tuesday.
8195 Front Beach Road Panama City Beach, FL 32407 Station: 850-234-7777 News: 850-230-5221 Fax: 850-233-6647
Gray Television, Inc. - Copyright © 2002-2013 - Designed by Gray Digital Media - Powered by Clickability
User Agent: CCBot/2.0 - 102582219