MHS
1744 Payne Avenue
Cleveland OH 44114
USA


Phone
216 623 6555

24/7
Crisis Hotline

216 623 6888

TTY/TDD
216 623 6540

Facsimile
216 623 6539

MHS moved into new offices on 18 and 19 April 2007.  The renovated building has separate reception and clinic areas for children.

Home

Mission

Rights & Ethics

Privacy Notice

Our Funders

Human Resources

Job Opportunities

How to Help

 

List of Programs

Homeless Assistance

Mobile Crisis Team

Trauma Intervention

Child & Family Focused Services

Psychiatry & Nursing

Outcomes

 

News

Important Events

Quality Improvement

Finances

 

Our Service Area

Directions

Client Data

Service Data

Staff

 

 
Mental Health Services for Homeless Persons, Inc. (MHS); Cleveland, Ohio, U.S.A.

Click here for a list of prior Service Note newsletters available on the MHS website. The list opens in a separate window.
6 July 2005


Suicidal deaths in 2004 increase 18 percent.

After a marked decline last year to the lowest number in nearly 60 years, the number of suicidal deaths in Cuyahoga County, Ohio, in 2004 increased to 162, an 18% increase from the 133 suicidal deaths in 2003. MHS monitors trends in suicidal deaths because our Mobile Crisis Team provides Cuyahoga County, Ohio, with 24/7 hotline, suicide prevention, and crisis outreach services. The Mobile Crisis Team is an American Association of Suicidology-approved crisis intervention program.

A bar graph of annual suicidal deaths in Cuyahoga County, Ohio, U.S.A., from 1979 to 2004.

The Cuyahoga County's Coroner's Office released preliminary data to MHS while preparing its 2004 Statistical Report. The bar graph above presents the trend in the annual number of suicidal deaths in the County during the past 26 years. The average number of suicidal deaths during that period was 183. The highest number was 276, recorded in 1979; the lowest was last year's 133. In 2004, the number of suicidal deaths per 100,000 people was 12, up from 9.8 in 2003, but lower than the rate of 12.2 in 2002, and 12.9 in 2001.

Large year-to-year changes in the number of suicidal deaths are not uncommon, as shown in the graph below of the annual percentage change in the number of suicides.

A bar graph of the percentage rate of change in annual suicidal deaths in Cuyahoga County, Ohio, U.S.A., from 1979 to 2004.

There were 12,501 new requests for services to the Mobile Crisis Team in 2004, or an average of 34 per day. Of those, 3,767 (an average of 10 per day) were because of depression or concerns about suicide. Members of our staff work with the Cuyahoga County Community Mental Health Board to implement the County's suicide prevention plan. MHS has also established collaborative service protocols with many of the community mental health centers, hospitals, and other providers of healthcare and supportive services that help those in suicidal crisis.

To view the Service Note as a web page on the MHS website, click here.

Click here for a one-page Microsoft Word version of this Service Note that opens with your word processing application, in a separate browser window, without affecting this window.  You may then save or print the document.  When done, just close or minimize the new window.

We send e-mail Service Notes to those who have expressed an interest in our mission. We understand that time is limited, unlike the number of e-mail items you may seem to get. If you'd like us to refrain from sending future newsletters, just let us know.

We would also like to know if someone forwarded this, and you'd like to directly receive future Service Notes, or if you have a new e-mail address. And, of course, we welcome your comments. Please send a message to Joel [the "at" symbol] mhs-inc.org Thank you.

Copyright (c) 2005
Mental Health Services for Homeless Persons, Inc. (MHS)
All Rights Reserved.
MHS, 1736 Superior Avenue East, Cleveland, Ohio 44114-2944 U.S.A.
Voice - 216-623-6555 / TDD - 216-623-6540

Julie Rittenhouse, President, Board of Trustees
Steven M. Friedman, Ph.D., Executive Director


MHS is a contract agency of the Cuyahoga County Community Mental Health Board, and a partner agency of United Way Services of Greater Cleveland.