AhlulBayt News Agency

source : PressTV
Tuesday

30 July 2019

4:03:41 AM
965684

7th NYPD officer dies by suicide this year amid a ‘mental health crisis’

Another police officer with the New York Police Department has died from an apparent suicide, the fifth NYPD officer to take his own life in the past two months and the seventh since the beginning of 2019, amid what officials have declared a "mental health crisis."

(ABNA24.com) The officer, whose name was not immediately released, was found dead on Saturday at his home in the New York City borough of Staten Island, US media reported.

"The tragic news today that another member of the NYPD has been lost to suicide breaks our hearts, and is a deep sorrow felt by all of New York City," NYPD Police Commissioner James O'Neill said in a statement released late Saturday.

"To every member of the NYPD, please know this: it is okay to feel vulnerable. It is okay if you are facing struggles," he said. "And it is okay to seek help from others. You may not know this, and it may be hard to imagine, but you are not out there all by yourself."

In June, three NYPD officers died by suicide in less than 10 days, including a precinct chief and an experienced detective, prompting O'Neill to warn of a "mental health crisis" in the department.

The NYPD has averaged about four or five suicides each year over the past five years, O'Neill said last month.

More than 100 law enforcement officers in the United States have so far taken their own lives in 2019, NYPD Chief of Department Terence Monahan, the department's highest ranking uniformed police officer, said in June.

The deaths are part of a disturbing trend across the US. In 2018, at least 167 officers died by suicide, according to the nonprofit group Blue Help.

According to one study, law enforcement officers are 30 percent more likely to kill themselves than the general public.

In a survey conducted last year by NBC New York, 78 percent of police officers across the US reported experiencing critical stress on the job, with 16 percent saying the stress triggers thoughts of suicide.

A 2018 study by the Ruderman Family Foundation, a philanthropic organization, found policemen and firefighters are more likely to die by suicide than in the line of duty.




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