logo
Local report highlights "acute suicidality"

Local report highlights "acute suicidality"

Axios07-03-2025

A recent paper from Healthier Colorado, a nonprofit advocating for health care policy, sheds light on " acute suicidality," a condition with a growing body of research.
Why it matters: Suicide is the eighth leading cause of death in Colorado, while the number of kids and teens who die by suicide in the state more than doubled between 2010 and 2020, per state data.
State of play: Acute suicidality can occur when a person has a sudden onset of symptoms without the typical warning signs or indicators of someone who may be considering suicide, according to the report released last month.
It includes people who attempt suicide shortly after contemplating it for the first time — sometimes within hours or minutes.
Yes, but: Some medical researchers are hesitant to adopt acute suicidality as a diagnosis, citing the need for additional studies, University of Colorado School of Medicine clinical psychologist Ian Stanley tells us.
Stanley, who specializes in suicide prevention, says experts have determined chronic and acute risks associated with suicide. But more research is needed to clarify the distinction between those risks before arriving at a diagnosis, he says.
Context: Suicide is typically, but not exclusively, linked to long-term mental health disorders.
It's often associated with major depressive, bipolar or substance use disorders, report co-author and senior policy director at Healthier Colorado Christina Walker tells us.
Zoom in: The paper commemorates Maddy Lignell, who died by suicide in May 2021.
Family of the 26-year-old, who grew up in Boulder, say he didn't have a preexisting mental health condition. His parents believe his death was connected to acute suicidality, since it occurred just after he started sharing work-related worries.
What's next: The paper recommends a suicide-specific diagnosis in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, the handbook used by medical professionals for diagnosing mental health disorders.
The paper identifies two potential formal diagnoses: acute suicidality affective disturbances (ASAD) and suicide-crisis syndrome (SCS).
It also calls for partnering with clinicians to create new or improved screening and intervention tools.
If you or someone you know may be considering suicide, call or text the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 988. Ayuda disponible en español.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Beyond stereotypes: Survey provides insights about trans Americans from trans Americans
Beyond stereotypes: Survey provides insights about trans Americans from trans Americans

Yahoo

time14 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Beyond stereotypes: Survey provides insights about trans Americans from trans Americans

The organization said that transgender Americans in all states and Washington D.C. participated in the survey in 2022. (Getty Images) This story discusses suicide. If you or someone you know is contemplating suicide, please call or text the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 988. When transgender Americans experience discrimination — like being harassed or denied equal services and medical care — they're more likely to have poor mental health, a new report shows. 'Health and Wellbeing: Findings from the 2022 US Trans Survey,' released by the Advocates for Trans Equality Education Fund on Wednesday, includes insights from surveying 84,170 trans adults across the United States. The report doesn't break down results by state, but the organization said that transgender Americans in all states and Washington D.C. participated in the survey in 2022. Questions covered general health and access to health care, transition related care, sexual and reproductive health, mental health, life satisfaction and happiness and substance use. Ankit Rastogi, the director of research at Advocates for Trans Equality, said during a Tuesday press conference that the organization conducts the survey because 'the best way to learn about trans people is to ask trans people.' 'We need social acceptance and family support and the ability to live our lives authentically in public safely,' Rastogi said. 'These are all means to create better health and well-being among trans people.' Among other findings, the report shows: Trans people who have supportive family members reported lower rates of suicidality than those without support. Among those with no victimization, 31% reported considering suicide in the past year, lower than the 50% for those who were verbally harassed, 53% for those who were denied equal treatment and 63% for those who were physically assaulted. Older Americans surveyed reported better health than younger respondents with 78% of those 65 and older vs. 60% of 18-24-year-olds rating their health as good or better. About 84% wanted gender-affirming care and about 60% received it. Trust in health care providers was higher in 2022 than in 2015, when the organization last conducted the survey, with half of respondents saying all their providers knew they were transgender compared to 40% in 2015. Many health care providers were supportive of their trans patients. early 3 in 4 (73%) respondents who disclosed their transgender status to their provider reported they felt treated with respect by at least one provider — higher than the 62% in 2015. Despite greater trust in medical providers, trans individuals still put off seeing a health care provider because they fear they'll be disrespected. The survey shows this is true for 32% of trans men and 20% of trans women. The fear of mistreatment isn't unwarranted. The survey shows 47% of gender non-conforming Americans had negative experiences with health care providers in the 12 months leading up to their survey. Olivia Hunt, the organization's director of federal policy, said the survey results can offer policy makers and the general public a better understanding of what it means to be a transgender person in America. 'Over the past decade, the idea of trans people has become something that's more and more prominent in the media and popular consciousness,' Hunt said during the Tuesday press conference. 'But unfortunately, to most people, including those lawmakers and policymakers that I and my team meet with so often, trans people ourselves are just an abstract idea, an idea that's based on stereotypes and assumptions and often incredibly inaccurate pop culture representations of trans people.' Involvement in advocacy, Hunt said, will help make 'trans people real' rather than a composite of a stereotypical character. And, she said, 'having real, concrete and rigorous data about the realities of trans people's day to day lives' helps to dispel misinformation. 'Trans people live all around the country. We're not just a community that exists in some sort of abstract 'somewhere else.' We're in every state and territory, in towns and cities from coast to coast, and almost certainly in every single congressional district,' Hunt said. 'That's something that I think is still not really there in the public consciousness.' SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX

Poll: Colorado voters do not want to see funding cuts for assistance programs
Poll: Colorado voters do not want to see funding cuts for assistance programs

Yahoo

time19 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Poll: Colorado voters do not want to see funding cuts for assistance programs

DENVER (KDVR) — As the spending plan known as the One, Big, Beautiful Bill makes its way through the U.S. Senate, new polling is out here at home, giving insight into how some Coloradans feel about programs that could see cuts under the proposal. The poll by Healthier Colorado shows that support for programs like SNAP and Medicaid is strong among Colorado voters. Safe2Tell report involving sexual misconduct leads to arrest 'They are going to rip this away from Colorado, but also the 36 other states that have utilized this,' said Congresswoman Brittany Pettersen. The congresswoman representing Colorado's seventh congressional district is concerned that substance abuse programs funded by Medicaid could be gutted if cuts inside the spending proposal in Washington come to fruition. 'With the budget proposal, they are taking states' ability to apply for the waiver that we utilized in Colorado and across the nation to draw down federal dollars to support treatment programs for those who are struggling with addiction,' Pettersen said. The concern over cuts comes as new data from the Centers for Disease Control shows a 35% drop in fentanyl deaths among young people in Colorado. New polling data from a Healthier Colorado survey out today also shows how some Coloradans may feel about the potential cuts to services. The survey, conducted between late last month and the early part of this month, polled 675 Colorado voters. 49% of them are unaffiliated voters, 26% are registered Democrats, 23% are registered Republicans. Aurora City Council will not hold in-person meetings until Kilyn Lewis lawsuit concludes Of the folks polled, 48% of people surveyed say they want to see an increase in Medicaid funding, and 25% said they would like to see it stay about the same. Only 21% say they would like to see a decrease. The survey also polled people about SNAP benefits, with 83% of people surveyed saying they support funding those benefits. 404 of the 675 people who took the survey live in Colorado's eighth congressional district. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Fewer than 1 in 4 Colorado voters support Medicaid cuts
Fewer than 1 in 4 Colorado voters support Medicaid cuts

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Yahoo

Fewer than 1 in 4 Colorado voters support Medicaid cuts

(Stock photo by) Just 21% of Colorado voters want Congress to decrease Medicaid spending, according to a poll released Tuesday. Concerns about gutted health care access come as U.S. Senate Republican leaders work to push through a tax and spending bill that would cut Medicaid by an estimated $625 billion over the next decade. The poll zeroed in on the 8th Congressional District, which includes the northern Denver metro area and parts of Weld County. In the district, where 1 in 4 residents receive Medicaid benefits, 63% of voters said they would be less likely to vote for a candidate who voted to cut Medicaid. SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX The 8th District is represented by Republican Gabe Evans, who voted in favor of the plan that would reduce federal Medicaid spending when it was brought to the U.S. House of Representatives in May. A spokesperson for Evans defended the vote, saying a proposed provision to institute part-time work requirements for some people to retain Medicaid eligibility would make 'the program more efficient by cutting out fraud, waste, and abuse.' 'Congressman Gabe Evans has been steadfast in his support of protecting Medicaid for the vulnerable populations it was created to serve — pregnant women, kids, and disabled people,' said spokesperson Delanie Bomar in a statement Tuesday. Evans, who was elected to the House last year, represents one of the country's few congressional swing districts. According to the poll, 42% of voters in the district want to see increased federal Medicaid spending, 20% want it to stay about the same and 28% want it to decrease. Medicaid, the state-federal health care program for lower-income people and some with disabilities, serves more than 70 million U.S. residents. The poll of 675 registered Colorado voters was conducted by Broomfield-based firm Magellan Strategies on behalf of the nonprofit Healthier Colorado. It has a margin of error of 3.7%. 'Politicians are saying that they want to cut Medicaid to make it better, but the poll shows clearly that voters aren't buying what they're selling,' said Jake Williams, CEO of Healthier Colorado. 'It shows that there's real political peril for any candidate who votes to cut Medicaid.' Bomar pointed to the poll's findings that many respondents, especially those who are Republicans or unaffiliated, said Medicaid 'should only be for U.S. citizens or legal residents, with some calling for stricter eligibility enforcement.' Immigrants who are in the U.S. unlawfully are not eligible for federal Medicaid benefits, but Colorado and 13 other states provide some state-funded coverage to immigrants lacking permanent legal status. Under the proposed federal cuts, an estimated 7.8 million people, most of them citizens or lawful residents, would lose access to Medicaid, according to the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office. Some of the main reasons cited in the poll by respondents who said they have favorable opinions of Medicaid are the benefits it provides to low-income Coloradans, seniors, children, people with disabilities and single parents. 'The poll shows that Medicaid cuts would have devastating effects for both our health and economy here in Colorado,' Williams said. 'I also think it shows that Colorado voters aren't dummies.' SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store