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Daily-current-affairs / 12 Oct 2022

Blaming Technology for Deaths by Suicide is Misguided : Daily Current Affairs

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Date: 13/10/2022

Relevance: GS-2: Issues Relating to Development and Management of Social Sector/Services relating to Health.

Key Phrases: National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB), Causes of Suicides, cyberbullying, National Institutes of Health in the U.S., National Tele-Mental Health Programme, Awareness campaigns, sensitisation programmes, community support, counselling services.

Why in News?

  • The most recent National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB) data for 2021 shows that suicide claimed 1,64,033 lives during that year.
  • Two decades into the 21st century, deaths by suicide remain a major source of social distress and public policy concern in India.

Causes of Suicides:

  • ‘Family Problems’ (33.2%)
  • ‘Illness’ (18.6%)
  • ‘Drug Abuse/ Alcoholic Addiction’ (6.4%),
  • ‘Marriage Related Issues’ (4.8%),
  • ‘Love Affairs’ (4.6%),
  • ‘Bankruptcy or Indebtedness’ (3.9%),
  • ‘Unemployment’ (2.2%),
  • ‘Failure in Examination’ (1.0%),
  • ‘Professional/Career Problem’ (1.6%) and
  • ‘Poverty’ (1.1%)

Blaming technology:

  • One of the causes of suicide, which has been prevalent in contemporary discussions, is the expanding role of digital technologies.
  • Aggravation of depression and other mental health issues leading to suicide is being repeatedly attributed to technology.
  • Factors such as cyber bullying, loss of self-esteem due to social media, extreme binge-watching of online content or heavy reliance on virtual followers/communities for validation are all said to be contributing to the issue.
  • It is clear that the more technology gains influence over the human condition, the starker will be its role in the best and worst of human experience.
  • However, it will serve us well to realise that technology is neither at the core of the problem nor the perfect solution for it.

Need to comprehensively understand the problem:

  • It is not the case that technology has no role to play in adverse mental health conditions or related cases of suicide; the issue is the sensational and misdirected analysis of the causes of suicides.
  • This takes the focus away from a comprehensive understanding of the issue and a more appropriate solution to it.
  • For example, no one can deny the link between cyberbullying and suicidal thoughts and attempts.
    • According to a study funded by the National Institutes of Health in the U.S., participants who experienced cyberbullying were more than four times as likely to report thoughts of suicide and attempts as those who did not. However, similar results are true even for those who are bullied in person.
    • The conclusion is that the medium of bullying is not the sole culprit; it is the act of bullying itself that needs to be addressed.
    • Awareness campaigns, sensitisation programmes, community support and counselling services are usually considered good solutions against bullying — cyber or otherwise.

The case of Tamil Nadu:

  • Gaming Addiction as reason for suicide:
    • Preliminary news reports associated several suicide incidents with gaming addiction, particularly with online rummy games.
    • These reports elicited a heavy policy response from the Tamil Nadu government in the form of an ordinance, which banned most online games played for money, including rummy and poker.
    • On closer examination, multiple independent studies, such as the one by Rotary’s Rainbow Project, found a high degree of exaggeration in reports associating deaths by suicide in the State with online rummy games.
  • Real reasons for suicides in Tamil Nadu:
    • The real reasons for these deaths were different from those earlier reported.
    • Moreover, experts researching suicide made a direct representation to the Tamil Nadu government on insufficient data for the correlation between suicide and online gaming.
    • Analysis of the data from the NCRB on deaths by suicide in Tamil Nadu makes it evident that the policy response is not adequate to address the magnitude of the crisis in the State.
    • Tamil Nadu has consistently had among the highest shares of reported deaths by suicide in the country, reporting over 11% of total cases for much of the previous decade, and nearly 19,000 cases in 2021 alone.
  • Need to address the root cause with holistic policy:
    • According to the NCRB, family problems, illness, substance abuse, and marriage/love-related issues alone contribute to more than two-thirds of the deaths by suicide in India.
    • Therefore, it is incumbent upon the Tamil Nadu government to address these root causes and evolve a holistic policy response to minimise future cases.
    • Rather than top-down policy formulations, focusing only on a few high-profile incidents, an inclusive community-based mental health and suicide-prevention approach may prove to be more effective in saving lives.
    • Further, the State may consider how technological measures from service providers can also become a part of this policy response.

Use of technology in improving mental health:

  • The Central government, on its part, is already embracing technology's potential role in improving citizens' mental health outcomes.
  • In February, it announced the National Tele-Mental Health Programme to provide access to free, round-the-clock mental health interventions in remote and underserved areas.
  • Acknowledgement of suicidal thoughts and attempts to address a host of interrelated causes and effects are necessary to design effective and proportionate policy prescriptions.
  • While technology is certainly an agent of this complex matrix, it can neither be seen as a root cause nor as a panacea.
  • Those in distress or having suicidal tendencies could seek help and counselling by calling any of the numbers on this link

Conclusion:

  • Any loss of life is deeply unfortunate, but the notion of suicide is especially disturbing and beyond rationalisation for the affected family.
  • Multiple sectors of society should come forward and create multi-sectoral collaboration, awareness raising, capacity building, financing, and surveillance that can keep the issue in check.
  • These efforts must be integrated and comprehensive because complex problems like suicide can’t be managed through a single approach.

Source: The Hindu

Mains Question:

Q. It is wrong to attribute suicide fatalities to technology; instead, society needs to fully comprehend the problem and find a better way to address it. Discuss with suitable examples.


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