Tag: suicide

  • Nagpur man live-streams suicide on Facebook

    Nagpur man live-streams suicide on Facebook

    [ad_1]

    Nagpur: A 27-year-old man from Maharashtra’s Nagpur hanged himself while live-streaming the act on Facebook for almost 40 minutes in the early hours of Tuesday, police said.

    Krutank Siddharth Dongre, a resident of Kamptee, committed suicide while live-streaming from his wife’s Facebook account around 1.30 am, an official said.

    The man was an alcoholic and unemployed. He had had a tiff with his wife, who had left him, he said.

    MS Education Academy

    When his family was away on Monday, Krutank consumed alcohol and logged in to his wife’s Facebook account late in the night, the official said.

    While live-streaming using his cellphone, he hanged himself from a ceiling fan with a scarf, he said.

    Once the video went viral, the man’s relatives, neighbours and friends gathered in front of his house and the police also reached the spot, the official said.

    The police have registered an accidental death report, he added.

    [ad_2]
    #Nagpur #man #livestreams #suicide #Facebook

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • IIT-Madras Ph.D. student dies by suicide, third case this year

    IIT-Madras Ph.D. student dies by suicide, third case this year

    [ad_1]

    A 32-year-old Ph.D. student of the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT), Madras, was found dead in his room in Velachery area, Chennai, police said on Sunday.

    The deceased student identified as Sachin was a resident of West Bengal who allegedly died by suicide.

    On March 31, Sachin posted a cryptic WhatsApp status that read: “I am sorry, not good enough”. Seeing the status, his friends rushed to his home where Sachin’s body was found hanging in his room.

    MS Education Academy

    Following this, the deceased was rushed to the hospital but declared dead by doctors. “The dead body was taken into custody and sent to Royapet Government Hospital for autopsy. Further investigation is underway,” police said.

    This is the third incident of suicide reported from IIT Madras this year while 11th case since 2018.

    Subscribe us on The Siasat Daily - Google News

    [ad_2]
    #IITMadras #Ph.D #student #dies #suicide #case #year

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • ASI Hangs Self In Central Kashmir

    [ad_1]

    SRINAGAR: An assistant sub-inspector of the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) has allegedly committed suicide in Charar-i-Sharief area of central Kashmir’s Budgam district, officials said on Saturday.

    Quoting an official, KNO reported that the officer posted at Radar Station allegedly hanged himself to death late last night.

    He said his body has been sent to sub-district hospital Chadoora for post-mortem.

    The official said that police have taken cognisance of the matter.

    [ad_2]
    #ASI #Hangs #Central #Kashmir

    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • CRPF ASI commits suicide in Budgam

    [ad_1]

    Srinagar: An ASI in CRPF posted in Central Kashmir’s Budgam district allegedly committed suicide by hanging himself in his barrack, officials said on Saturday.

    They told that a CRPF personnel hanged self to dead in his barrack in Chadoora area of Budgam.

    They identified him as ASI Ajay Kumar Lama of Haryana who was part of 181 Battalion CRPF.

    Body has been shifted to SDH Chadoora for further procedural formalities, they said.

    They added that further inquest proceedings under 174 CRPC has been taken up to enquire the matter and reasons behind taking this harsh step.

    [ad_2]
    #CRPF #ASI #commits #suicide #Budgam

    ( With inputs from : roshankashmir.net )

  • Teenage Girl Hangs Self To Death

    [ad_1]

    SRINAGAR: A teenage girl was found hanging at her residence in Lajoora area of south Kashmir’s Pulwama district on Friday.

    Quoting an official, KNO reported that 13-year-old girl was found hanging inside her home in Lajoora on Friday.

    He said that her body was later taken to CHC Lajoora by locals.

    Meanwhile, police have started inquest proceedings in this regard.

    [ad_2]
    #Teenage #Girl #Hangs #Death

    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • Newly Married Girl Dies By Suicide

    Newly Married Girl Dies By Suicide

    [ad_1]

    SRINAGAR:  A non-local girl died by suicide just after 20 days of her marriage at a rented accommodation in Sopore area of north Kashmir’s Baramulla district, officials said here in Sunday.

    Quoting an official, KNO reported that the girl from Bangladesh was married to a Kupwara man around 20 days ago and last evening she hanged herself to death.

    She was rushed to a nearby hospital, where doctors declared her dead on arrival, he said.

    He said she was living with her husband at a rented accommodation in Badam Bagh area of Sopore.

    Meanwhile, police have taken cognizance of the incident and started investigation.(KNO)

    [ad_2]
    #Newly #Married #Girl #Dies #Suicide

    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • 23-Year-Old Youth Dies By Suicide

    [ad_1]

    SRINAGAR: A 23-year-old youth from North Kashmir who had allegedly consumed some poisonous substance on Friday in a bid to end his life, died in a Srinagar hospital on Saturday, official sources said.

    They said that the deceased (name withheld) resides in the Safapora area falling in the jurisdiction of the Bandipora district.

    The deceased was undergoing treatment at SMHS Hospital where he breathed his last on Saturday morning.

    Police in this regard have registered a case under relevant sections of law. (KNT)

    [ad_2]
    #23YearOld #Youth #Dies #Suicide

    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • Hospitals blame psych bed reopening delay on suicide precautions, staff shortages

    Hospitals blame psych bed reopening delay on suicide precautions, staff shortages

    [ad_1]

    outbreak virus new york 41828

    That was one reason cited by Northwell Health for the continuing closure of Syosset Hospital’s 20-bed inpatient psych unit, according to a reopening plan submitted in February. The unit was repurposed for Covid patients in 2020, which required the rapid installation of electrical and gas lines that remain exposed in the rooms.

    “We cannot simply re-open the unit as a psychiatry unit as reconfiguring the rooms requires very significant time and expense,” Manish Sapra, executive director of Northwell’s behavioral health service line, wrote in the plan.

    Sapra said the hospital permanently reassigned the psych unit’s staff at that time and would need about nine months to a year to hire at least 60 people to staff it. The rest of Northwell’s 533 licensed psychiatric beds are online, according to the plan.

    NYC Health + Hospitals described a similar issue with a 24-bed unit at Elmhurst Hospital in Queens, which is being used as a medical unit and needs to be reconfigured before it can house psychiatric patients again.

    The system’s plan, which is dated Jan. 18, says it expects to restore 179 of its 253 offline beds by the end of the year. The rest will not be back online until December 2024.

    Health + Hospitals spokesperson Chris Miller said the April 1 deadline does not apply to health systems like the city’s that were already working with the state on a reopening plan.

    “NYC Health + Hospitals is working closely with the state’s Office of Mental Health to reopen 200 psychiatric beds by this December, and we are on track to meet that goal,” Miller said in a statement. “Similar to other health systems, staffing remains the biggest challenge, and we have taken a number of steps to address this — from recruitment campaigns to school loan repayment for staff to new professional development programs.”

    Other hospitals blamed staffing shortages for remaining offline beds. New York-Presbyterian reported in its January reopening plan that Weill Cornell Medical Center’s 32-bed unit could only “safely staff and accommodate” 20 patients, and another 33 beds were offline at its 233-bed Westchester Behavioral Health Center due to “provider and staff coverage constraints.”

    Catholic Health’s Mercy Hospital, which is in Nassau County, said in its plan that it can only operate 29 of its 39 licensed beds due to size constraints and staffing levels and “does not have the ability to open these beds by the April 1st deadline.”

    Key context: As part of her $1 billion mental health plan unveiled in January, Hochul directed hospitals across the state to restore 850 inpatient psychiatric beds that they repurposed or closed during the Covid-19 pandemic.

    Hochul released her plan as Democratic lawmakers across the country face increasing pressure to address escalating and often intersecting crises of homelessness and serious mental health concerns in their states and cities.

    Of the 850 beds Hochul told hospitals to reopen, approximately 200 have already been brought back online. Another 300 will become operational by the end of this year, according to the governor’s office.

    “Since Governor Hochul took action to restore psychiatric hospital beds taken offline during COVID, hospitals have developed plans to bring nearly 60% of the missing psychiatric beds online,” Avi Small, a spokesperson for Hochul, said in a statement.

    Small said the state Office of Mental Health is in active conversations with hospitals about how best to achieve compliance.

    State officials have also called on hospitals to restore beds they took offline prior to the pandemic, citing a “need for acute psychiatric inpatient capacity across the State,” according to a January memo first reported by POLITICO.

    “Restoring these beds to active status is a crucial component of the State’s plan to increase the availability of acute inpatient mental health services,” the memo said.

    Under Hochul’s budget proposal, hospitals may be fined up to $2,000 per day for each psychiatric bed that remains offline after April 1, but it is unclear whether the policy will make it into the final budget. The Assembly has proposed eliminating it, and the Senate wants to require the state to first consider mitigating factors.

    More constraints: Long wait times for a spot in other facilities or programs have also squeezed psychiatric capacity at hospitals.

    According to New York-Presbyterian’s reopening plan, its Westchester Behavioral Health Center has an average of 22 patients per day awaiting beds in state-run psychiatric institutions, which are intended for longer stays and typically take referrals from hospital psychiatric units.

    The Westchester facility also reported an average of eight patients per day awaiting placement in a residential treatment center and “routine delays” finding supportive housing units for patients who had arrived unhoused.

    Hochul has pledged to add 150 new beds to state facilities and create 3,500 new units of housing for New Yorkers with mental illnesses in the upcoming state budget. And Mayor Eric Adams has said he would build 8,000 supportive housing units.

    What’s next: Despite Hochul’s directive, some health systems are forging ahead with plans to decrease their numbers of psychiatric beds.

    Mount Sinai Beth Israel has a state license for 92 psychiatric beds but was only operating 64 of those before the pandemic. The hospital is relocating those 64 beds to the bygone nursing home Rivington House, which it is converting into a behavioral health center.

    The system will also decertify 21 psychiatric beds at the Mount Sinai Hospital on the Upper East Side, citing space needs for an expanded cancer hospital and “significant congestion” in the emergency room, according to its reopening plan submitted in January.

    But because Mount Sinai Morningside is reopening a 29-bed psychiatric unit, which had been offline for over a year before the pandemic due to planned renovations, the system claimed a net increase of eight operational psych beds — despite the decrease in licensed beds.

    The system claimed in its reopening plan that it has seen a “decline in the need for inpatient psychiatric hospitalizations for our patients” and would work to expand its psychiatric emergency departments and outpatient programs.

    A Mount Sinai spokesperson declined to comment.

    New York-Presbyterian Brooklyn Methodist Hospital has 49 psych beds across two units that were used for critical care during the pandemic. The hospital restored 24 of those last summer, but the remaining 25 beds “require further assessment and planning,” the system said in its reopening plan, noting its intent to open a behavioral health and primary care center nearby.

    “It is anticipated that this new facility will address the behavioral health needs of the service area,” system executives wrote. “The establishment of this new outpatient program will shape future considerations for inpatient psychiatric care.”

    Angela Smith Karafazli, a New York-Presbyterian spokesperson, said in a statement that the system “remains in active discussions with regulatory agencies about our proposed plan.”

    “At this point we don’t have additional info to share,” she added.

    [ad_2]
    #Hospitals #blame #psych #bed #reopening #delay #suicide #precautions #staff #shortages
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Hyderabad: Man sentenced to jail for abetting wife’s suicide

    Hyderabad: Man sentenced to jail for abetting wife’s suicide

    [ad_1]

    Hyderabad: The Ibrahimpatnam court on Tuesday sentenced a man to 5 years of rigorous imprisonment for abetting the suicide of his wife. 

    According to the police, Udugula Aruna was married to Udugula Srinivas of Kongara Kalan village, Ibrahimpatnam in 2001 and had two children with him. Srinivas constantly harassed her for more Dowry and with suspicions about her character, 

    On December 28, 2016, she poured kerosene and set herself ablaze. She was brought to Gandhi Hospital for treatment. She gave her statement to the police on December 29, 2016. 

    She passed away on January 10, 2017, and the Ibrahimpatnam police investigated the issue and arrested Srinivas. 

    During the trial on Tuesday, the court slapped Srinivas with rigorous imprisonment of 5 years and a fine of Rs 4000.

    Subscribe us on The Siasat Daily - Google News

    [ad_2]
    #Hyderabad #Man #sentenced #jail #abetting #wifes #suicide

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Reduced socialising during COVID main reason for suicide cases: IIT Madras Director

    Reduced socialising during COVID main reason for suicide cases: IIT Madras Director

    [ad_1]

    Chennai: Indian Institute of Technology Madras Director Kamakotti on Wednesday claimed that the reduced socialisation during the COVID pandemic is the main reason for the suicide incidents which were reported on the campus.

    In view of the three suicide incidents since September last year reported on the campus, Kamakotti said that the institution is preparing ‘Complete Suicide Prevention’ inside the premises.

    “We are trying to implement everything fast,” he said.

    IIT Madras launched the report on ‘Socio-Economic Costs of Suicides in Tamil Nadu’ which was released by state Health Minister M Subramanian. This report speaks about suicides and reasons for suicides and socio cost of suicides in Tamil Nadu.

    While speaking to the media, Health Minister M Subramanian said that Madras IIT has launched the report on ‘Socio-Economic Costs of Suicides in Tamil Nadu’.

    “This Report also would help with the going steps taken by the Tamil Nadu government to control suicides and accidents,” he said.

    While answering the question on recent suicides in Madras IIT campus Minister Subramanian said, ” IIT Madras Director Kamakotti has mentioned suicides. They are not hiding anything. After September, three suicides occurred in Madras IIT. The IIT Director has pointed out 4 reasons why suicides are taking place in educational institutions. We request everyone that suicide is not a solution for anything. In future, there should be no suicide”.

    Kamakotti said that the institution has been impacted by the suicide incidents.

    “IIT Madras has also been impacted because of suicides. It is painful. Since September, 3 suicides have happened inside the IIT Madras campus,” he said.

    “When we analyse suicide incidents, 4 main reasons we have found for suicides. Health issues, academic pressure, financial issues and personal issues. In each case, any one of these issues would have been there” Kamakotti added.

    He said that the administration has taken measures to curb the suicide incidents on campus.

    “After each suicide, we analysed to take measures to curb suicide. Each suicide gave us a new angle on such incidents. Specifically, after COVID, the personal touch has reduced among students. Group activities were reduced during the COVID period typically during the lockdown 2020 – 2021. Students who joined that time after their schooling never met their seniors and classrooms and they were alone at that time. This is a big challenge for us,” he said.

    Detailing the steps taken to stop the suicide incidents, Kamakotti said that the administration is planning to create complete suicide prevention on the campus.

    “Now we have studied the whole problem and we are planning to create complete suicide prevention in Madras IIT. We are trying to implement everything fast. This would help coming batches to completely stops suicide. Faculties, Patents and student committees all should involve and stop this. For sure there is an end to this and very soon we will implement everything. Zero suicide nation is our goal,” he said.

    “Socialising is reduced during COVID is the main reason for suicides,” he added.

    [ad_2]
    #Reduced #socialising #COVID #main #reason #suicide #cases #IIT #Madras #Director

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )