New Golden Gate safety nets are reducing suicide deaths, study finds
The study looks at recent suicide deaths along the iconic bridge. Officials say there have been an average of 30 confirmed suicide deaths per year for the past 20 years. In 2024, officials finished erecting a continuous stainless-steel barrier on both sides of the bridge after years of pushback from those who opposed modifying the bridge's art deco style.
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To assess the new nets' performance, researchers analyzed suicide data from monthly incident reports produced by the Golden Gate Bridge Highway and Transportation District, which operates and maintains the bridge. Their results were published in the journal Injury Prevention.
The researchers divided the data into three periods: preinstallation, between January 2000 and July 2018; installation, between August 2018 and December 2023; and post-installation, between January 2024 and December 2024.
Six-hundred and eighty-one people were confirmed to have died by suicide at the bridge during the study period, and there were 2,901 third-party interventions.
Before the installation, there were 2.48 suicide deaths per month at the bridge. The number dropped to 1.83 suicides per month during the installation period and 0.67 suicides per month after installation, the researchers found - a 73 percent reduction from preinstallation.
Although the number of third-party interventions declined over time, the rate of interventions rose after the nets were installed, the researchers found, from 8.22 interventions per month before the nets were erected to 14.42 during installation and 11 afterward. The reasons for the increase in interventions by third parties were unclear, the researchers said.
The results provide 'early but clear evidence that the safety nets are associated with an immediate and substantial reduction in suicides' at the Golden Gate Bridge, they conclude.
Ongoing monitoring and more research over a longer time frame is needed to further assess the success of the nets, the researchers say.
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If you or someone you know needs help, visit 988lifeline.org or call or text the Suicide & Crisis Lifeline at 988.
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Several metrics tracked by the CDC show a midsummer uptick of coronavirus underway in the United States. Viral levels in wastewater started rising in late June and are considered high in the West, South and Midwest and headed that direction in the Northeast, according to Marlene Wolfe, principal investigator and co-program director of WastewaterSCAN, a private initiative that tracks municipal sewage data. The levels of virus are roughly one-third of the levels recorded a year ago, when the country was experiencing an unusually large summer covid wave. Emergency room data suggests infections are disproportionately affecting children. As of Aug. 7, coronavirus diagnoses accounted for 2.18 percent of emergency room visits among children up to age 11, the largest jump of any age group. Still, some experts caution that numbers are still very small. 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Her dogs kept dying, and she got cancer. Then they tested her water. ELKTON, Md. - Debbie Blankenship's wheelchair carved perfect lines in the grass as she rolled into her backyard garden, passing a wooden arch filled with small grapes, a bush with plump blueberries and yellow crates filled with sprouting potatoes. She stopped at a dirt patch with a burial marker for her beagle - the latest of her dogs to die of cancer. Subscribe to The Post Most newsletter for the most important and interesting stories from The Washington Post. 'They are all buried back here. It's like a pet cemetery,' she said, catching her breath from navigating the hilly terrain. Gazing at the burial site, she spoke about her own long battle with cancer. For decades, Blankenship chalked up her health problems, including losing her right leg to an infection, to bad luck. Then in 2023 she received a phone call from W.L. 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'Scores of prominent restaurant chains and food brands dropping artificial ingredients from our food supply and historic reforms at the FDA to fast track lifesaving drugs and treatments prove that the entire HHS team is delivering for the American people.' According to the officials, Makary and Kennedy persuaded the White House to review statements by Prasad that Loomer said showed disloyalty, arguing they were taken out of context. 'I think it really is something good about the president that he's willing to change his mind when persuaded,' one of the senior administration officials said. But the victory could prove pyrrhic if Prasad's ability to set policy is diminished. Before his firing, Makary had named him not only the head of the FDA's Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research, which oversees regulation of vaccines and gene therapies like Elevidys, but also the agency's chief medical and scientific officer. 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Those patients are a subset of people with the condition, which weakens muscles and leads to the loss of the ability to walk, typically by age 12. Most die before they reach 30. Johnson's Right to Try Act, which Trump repeatedly touted on the campaign trail as a signature achievement of his first term, aims to allow patients with life-threatening diseases to try experimental medicines without FDA involvement. The agency has a separate longstanding program known as compassionate use that allows such patients to access experimental treatments when other options do not exist. 'I have never met or spoken to Dr. Prasad,' Johnson said when asked about Prasad's return. 'I hope all the new appointees within HHS and its subsidiary agencies restore integrity to scientific research, fully respect both the letter and spirit of the Right to Try Act, and carefully listen to and empathize with the patients who are impacted by their decisions.' 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