Suicides down for 8th straight year in '17

the-japan-news.com -- Jan 20

The number of people who committed suicide in the country in 2017 fell 757, or 3.5 percent, from the previous year to 21,140, down for the eighth consecutive year, a Health, Labor and Welfare Ministry report showed Friday.

The number of suicides per 100,000 people, or the suicide rate, came to 16.7, the lowest since the launch of the statistics in 1978, according to the report compiled on preliminary data provided by the National Police Agency.

Men continued to account for roughly 70 percent of the total number of people who killed themselves in the country, but their numbers fell below 15,000 for the first time in 22 years, at 14,693. The women’s reading went down to a record low of 6,447.

Japan saw the number of suicides top 30,000 for 14 straight years since 1998 amid fallout from a financial crisis, with the figure reaching as high as 34,427 in 2003.

From the peak level, suicides decreased by nearly 40 percent in 2017.

“On top of [improved] economic conditions, efforts to prevent suicides by municipalities and groups concerned seem to have produced fruit,” a ministry official in charge of the report said.

But pointing out that 58 people still commit suicide each day on average, the official called for implementing finely designed preventive measures by age group and area.