Katherine C. Gilyard

Spikes in Suicides Bolster Calls for Overdue Support

Carl Johnson will never forget his friend Jameel Smith, who took his life at the age of 22. “I like this pic a lot. lol,” Smith said. “I feel it is one of the few that captures me.” (Photo Credit: Courtesy of Carl Johnson)


If you’re thinking about suicide, are worried about a friend or loved one, or would like emotional support, please contact the 24/7 National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 1-800-273-TALK (8255), text “STRENGTH” to the Crisis Text Line at 741741 or go to suicidepreventionlifeline.orgFor TTY Users: Use your preferred relay service or dial 711 then 1-800-273-8255. Starting on July 16, anyone can simply dial 988.


By Katherine C. Gilyard/ Howard University News Service


The year 2010 feels like a lifetime ago for 33-year-old Carl Johnson, but the death of a close friend makes the year one he’ll never forget. Fresh out of finals week, and a week before his 21st birthday, Johnson got the phone call. His friend of four years, 22-year-old Jameel Smith, was found dead by suicide.


The conversation with Jameel’s roommate left Johnson speechless. “I remember Julius hysterical and crying on the phone, trying to get it out: ‘He’s gone.’”

 Looking back, Johnson recalls what might have been warning signs, but while in the thick of finishing his senior year at Morehouse College in Atlanta, the then 20-year-old was just trying to get through himself.


“It wasn’t necessarily that something was wrong with him and then it happened; he would, like, go down these rabbit holes where he didn’t really want to talk to people and just keep to himself,” Johnson said. “Actually, around that time, I’d come over to Julius and Jameel’s apartment and asked about Jameel. He just said, ‘He’s just having one of his moments where he don’t wanna talk to anybody.’”


Johnson is one of many people who have been reflecting on their own tragedies with the recent suicide death of Regina King’s son, Ian Alexander Jr. Condolences and an outpouring of support for King have been flooding social media timelines around the world since news of her son’s death broke last Friday.


The shock of the 26-year-old musician’s death is an experience that more families and friends are encountering with an increase in suicides among certain segments of Black, Indigenous and Hispanic communities. Concern and awareness are growing with more attention on the risk factors exacerbated by the coronavirus pandemic, as well as news reports and social media posts about Alexander and others. For example, Cheslie Kryst, TV correspondent for “Extra” and 2019 Miss USA, died on Sunday in Manhattan, and Mayor Kevin “Scooter” Ward, 44, of Hyattsville, Maryland, just outside the nation’s capital, died on Tuesday.


Suicides have increased by 3% among Black males of all ages. The spikes are highest among 15 to 24-year-olds at 16% and 25 to 34-year-olds at 12%. These spikes are occurring despite an overall 3% decrease in deaths by suicide since 2019 across the United States, according to the 2021 Rapid Release Report from the National Vital Statistics System….


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EMS Delays In Rural Areas

Better hope that you aren’t in a rural area if you are seriously hurt and need an ambulance. The wait could be dangerous.

Response times for emergency medical services are more than twice as long in rural areas than urban locations, according to a recent research letter in JAMA Surgery.

Median response times were 13 minutes out in the country compared with six in both city and suburban locations, researchers found after reviewing records of nearly 1.8 million EMS runs across the U.S. in 2015.

That’s not the worst of it. In rural areas, one in 10 EMS units did not reach an emergency scene for nearly half an hour after the 911 call came in, the study reported…..


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Vibe - 9th Wonder

 “The reason old and young heads alike emerged with a smile and an unparalleled combination of confidence. The genius behind treasured gems like Jill Scott’s “Beautiful Love” and Kendrick Lamar’s “Duckworth.” The man who earned his place in the industry through complete dedication to the craft and scholarship of the same. The activist, the historian, the “Vinyl Archaeologist,” Patrick Douthit. Or 9th Wonder, if you know anything about hip-hop”…


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Press Photographer Magazine: In the aftermath of tragedy, a portrait project affirms ‘Journalists Matter’

“With the families … they’re the hardest ones to photograph
because they’ve given up the most … they lost loved ones.
They’re sharing their stories with me and I’m sharing with
them and we’re trying to make sure people don’t forget who
the people were, and what journalists do.”
                                                                           – Paul Gillespie




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