

Helen C. Epstein, "Why Live: An Anatomy of Suicide Epidemics" (Columbia Global Reports, 2025)
12 snips Sep 3, 2025
Helen C. Epstein, a public health researcher at Bard College and author of "Why Live: An Anatomy of Suicide Epidemics," delves into the startling phenomenon of suicide epidemics. She discusses how these crises can unfold rapidly within communities, driven by profound social ruptures rather than just biological factors. Epstein's insights reveal the emotional toll of modernization, particularly on young men in Micronesia, and emphasize the urgent need for better communication and community support to combat rising suicide rates.
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What A Suicide Epidemic Is
- A suicide epidemic is a rapid spike in suicides within a defined population and time period.
- Epidemics show many people can become vulnerable when social conditions change suddenly.
Modernization As A Trigger
- Rapid modernization and economic reforms frequently precede suicide epidemics across diverse societies.
- Shifts from subsistence and sharing to cash-based individualism create loneliness that raises population suicide risk.
Soviet BLAT And Loss Of Belonging
- Epstein recounts how Soviet-era BLAT networks created mutual reliance that collapsed after capitalist transition.
- The loss of reciprocal favors left many feeling unneeded and contributed to alcoholism and suicides.