Influencing suicide rates among the elderly: The suicide prevention and regulation policies of Japan, the Netherlands, and South Korea

College

College of Liberal Arts

Document Type

Article

Source Title

Comparative Sociology

Volume

18

First Page

757

Last Page

790

Publication Date

2019

Abstract

By focusing on the elderly suicide rates, this study lays out the different suicide regulation and prevention policies of three developed countries – Japan, the Netherlands, and South Korea. The main goal is to compare and analyze how these policies, with disparate ways of handling suicide, influence elderly suicide rates in relation with their countries’ respective differing suicide determinants. By applying the ‘Method for Synthesizing about Public Policies’ created by Morestin, Gauvin, Hogue, and Benoit to check the status of efficiency and of any issues of public policies, it concludes that South Korea shows promise, while Japan’s suicide rates have certainly been scaling down. Conversely, in terms of the use of euthanasia, suicide rates in the Netherlands have been continuously rising.

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Disciplines

Gerontology | Social and Behavioral Sciences

Keywords

Older people—Suicidal behavior; Suicide—Prevention

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