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Singapore's suicide surge: why are more young people taking their own lives?

Singapore's suicide surge: why are more young people taking their own lives?

Financial pressures, the strain of caregiving and the demands of building a career are increasingly pushing
Singaporeans in their thirties to breaking point, with experts warning of a sharp rise in burnout and suicide among the so-called sandwich generation.
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Provisional statistics released last Saturday showed that 75 people in their thirties took their own lives in 2024, up from 66 the year before. This age group accounted for the highest number of suicides last year.
According to the Samaritans of Singapore, people in their thirties face a unique constellation of complex pressures, from family issues and job instability to mounting mental health challenges.
But suicide is rarely attributable to a single cause. Rather, it arises from what Dr Sharon Lu, principal clinical psychologist at Singapore's Institute of Mental Health, described as an 'interplay of biological, psychological, social and cultural risk factors', compounded by a lack of resilience.
A customer withdraws banknotes from an ATM in Singapore. Financial pressures are among the myriad factors that drive people to suicide, experts say. Photo: AFP
'It is often assumed that depression is the cause of all suicides, but suicide is often due to the interaction of a myriad of factors and life circumstances,' Lu said.
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'Depression may be one of the many stressors an individual is struggling with, but someone who is not depressed can still be suicidal.'
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