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‘Public Health Approach to Suicide Prevention’

Led by Professor Paul Siu Fai Yip and his team members, Dr Yik Wa Law and Dr Qijin Cheng, the Hong Kong Jockey Club Centre for Suicide Research and Prevention has reduced the myth of suicide and improved awareness of mental health in the community.  The quality of suicide news reporting has significantly been changed to avoid copycat effect.  The team received the University’s Knowledge Exchange Excellence Award 2017 for their ‘Public Health Approach to Suicide Prevention’.

Led by Professor Paul Siu Fai Yip and his team members, Dr Yik Wa Law and Dr Qijin Cheng, the Hong Kong Jockey Club Centre for Suicide Research and Prevention uses a public health approach advocated by the World Health Organization for suicide prevention that involves multi-layer intervention: indicated, selective and universal.  They have worked with community stakeholders to launch community based suicide prevention programmes.  With support of the Coroner’s Court, they have developed the most comprehensive surveillance and monitoring system of suicides using Coroner’s court data.  They have done vigorous psycho-autopsy research in identifying risk and protective factors for suicidal risks.  With the support of donors and Government funding, they have been testing good practice models including positive mental work for school children, restriction of means of suicide, social media engagement with vulnerable youth, and knowledge exchange with and for the community. 

All the suicide prevention work of the Centre is evidence-based and empirically validated, and the Centre has become a knowledge hub for suicide prevention locally and internationally.  Their work has reduced the myth of suicide and improved awareness of mental health in the community.  The quality of suicide news reporting has significantly been changed to avoid copycat effect.  Combined with the concerted effort in the community, the suicide rate of Hong Kong has gone down from its historical high 18.8 per 100,000 in 2003 to estimated 12.6 per 100,000 in 2016, which is an impressive 36.9% reduction.  ​

Professor Yip and his team received the University’s Knowledge Exchange Excellence Award 2017 for this project.

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