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‘I’m always going to be vulnerable’: Why are suicide rates among women rising? | UK News

Emma Mills-Sheffield knows all too well the grief that suicide brings. Her sister Lou took her own life. And so too did their maternal grandmother. Emma’s father tried too.

“The cycle of grief was immense and deep,” she explains as we sit and talk in her Hove home.

“It’s not straightforward when someone takes their own life; the anger, the disbelief, the constant searching. There must have been evidence. There must have been something we could have done. There must have been a note. There must have been something.

“And then the anger around, weirdly, other people. People don’t know what to say or do.”

After years of decline, suicide rates are rising – especially among women.

In 2023 in England and Wales, they reached levels not seen since 1999. Some 6,069 suicides were registered in the two nations in 2023, up from 5,642 in 2022.

Suicide data is complex and can be quite hard to interpret.

The official figures have been disputed, with some experts saying they have been oversimplified. This is partly because suicides can take a while to be registered and show up in the official data.

But what can’t be disputed is that far too many people are taking their own lives.

This is a public health crisis that needs urgent intervention, according to suicide prevention charities, which are seeing a surge in the number of women seeking help.

Read more:
Parents of students who died by suicide call for legal duty of care to be imposed on universities

‘Women are experiencing high levels of depression and anxiety’

Rachael Swann, CEO of Grassroots Suicide Prevention, a charity that helps people in crisis, says 70% of users of their Stay Alive mobile app, which connects people to support, are now women.

The rise in women taking their own lives is attributed to many factors, including menopause and perinatal depression, she says.

Rachel Swann, CEO of Grassroots Suicide Prevention
Image:
Rachael Swann, CEO of Grassroots Suicide Prevention

“As a midlife mum myself, I could really see the pressures,” she says.

“Women are really experiencing high levels of depression and anxiety, and there’s been a high level of domestic abuse following the pandemic.

“And then we’ve got that middle age group of 45 to 64-year-olds, who are the sandwich generation. So they might be juggling caring responsibilities, working and childcare. I’m in that space and there really is very little time and space for self-care.”

More attempts ‘than I have been able to count’, survivor says

Olivia-Louise Hamilton has been trying to take her own life since she was 12 years old.

She had a difficult childhood and battled for years with her poor mental health. She is 29 now and the dark winter months are challenging.

Olivia-Louise Hamilton
Image:
Olivia-Louise Hamilton

“There are more times than I have been able to count,” she explains about her attempts to take her own life.

“And they were quite different in the lead-up to it. Some of them were very, very impulsive, maybe in response to a certain trigger or because I’ve been sort of misusing alcohol, whereas others were a lot more premeditated, there was a lot more planning and that longer-term thought that went into them.”

‘I’m always going to be vulnerable’

Ms Hamilton is in a much better place now, but that does not mean her struggle is over. It is always there.

“I think I’d be lying if I said it isn’t something that’s on my mind. I think that I’m always going to be vulnerable to those sorts of thoughts just because of my history,” she says.

“But equally, the skills and the tools that I’ve learned over the years, I think really help me move forward with the hope that things might be different.

“I always think I’m hopeful. I’m hopeful enough that I won’t have a crisis. But I guess I’m not stupid enough to think that that won’t ever happen.”

Labour has promised to tackle suicide

The Labour government has promised to tackle suicide with the recruitment of over 8,000 new mental health staff specially trained to support people at risk of suicide.

In its 2024 manifesto, it said it would “deliver a renewed drive to tackle the biggest killers”, including suicide.

Ms Hamilton can tell when things are getting too much and how to reach for help. But tragically, it’s not the same for thousands of other women.

Anyone feeling emotionally distressed or suicidal can call Samaritans for help on 116 123 or email jo@samaritans.org in the UK. In the US, call the Samaritans branch in your area or 1 (800) 273-TALK.

Meet the Redditch residents turning to food banks to survive amid rising interest rates | UK News

At Batchley Support Group in Redditch, I meet Tony.

He’s 59 and one of a higher-than-average number of people in the town who have a mortgage.

That’s despite the area having the fifth-lowest average salaries in England and Wales.

It means he, like others, may be disproportionately affected by interest rate rises.

Tony has struggled to make payments on his tracker mortgage and the recent interest rate rises have pushed him over the edge
Image:
Tony has struggled to make payments on his tracker mortgage

It turns out, for Tony, it’s much more than that.

He’s just been told his flat may be repossessed.

Tony’s circumstances are complicated. He bought the property 19 years ago when he had a job as a lorry driver.

He subsequently became disabled, suffering brain damage, after a street attack.

In recent years his disability benefit changed to a “limited capacity” one.

It has meant he has struggled to make payments on his tracker mortgage and the recent interest rate rises have pushed him over the edge.

Read more:
Military personnel using food banks down to ‘personal decisions around budgeting’
Food banks distribute record emergency food parcels

Intimidating and impossible figures

He takes us into his top-floor flat and shows us his papers in a darkened living room.

One letter clearly states his interest rate is rising by another 0.5% from 1 August and he may be losing his home.

The letter states how he is now £7,000 in arrears with £29,000 left to pay on his mortgage.

These are intimidating and impossible figures for Tony.

He doesn’t use heating and limited electricity.

He can’t afford to buy a single piece of food.

He’s been making £150 payments every month but it’s not even half of what he needs to.

‘I’d be dead’ without food bank

“I’ve been here for 20 years. It is my home,” he tells me. “You know, I’m disabled, I need heat and everything else. Where am I going to go? I have got nowhere, no house to go. That’s it.”

I ask him if he didn’t have the nearby food bank, what he would do?

He replies simply: “I’d be knackered, I’d be dead.”

Single mother Sarah is holding down three jobs, but it still is not enough to help feed her and her family
Image:
Single mother Sarah is holding down three jobs but is still unable to feed her family

Single mother reliant on food bank

At the Batchley Support Group Centre – a hub in the middle of this community which offers advice and help for all issues – I also meet single mother Sarah.

She’s holding down three jobs, including an NHS technician role, an online teaching job and acting.

It’s still not enough to help feed her and her family.

She lives with her 13-year-old boy, and her 19-year-old son when he’s back from university.

She’s lucky her landlord hasn’t put her rent up, but she describes how everything else has increased.

“You can’t change the rent, you can’t change your gas, your electric, your water, your TV licence….

“So you can only change the way that you spend the money you have.”

She can pick up as much food as she needs from the food bank here for just £1.

But she’s also worried about interest rates on her credit card.

She describes being reliant on it to pay for fuel for her car to get to work.

‘More working people are struggling’

Mark Barron runs the Support Group, and has had to order an extra load of food each week recently to cope with demand.

He says the service is also seeing a rise in employed people seeking help: “We see more working people who are struggling.

“And that tells us it’s really about disposable income, what’s left once you pay the bills, if anything, what’s left to live on? And that’s, that’s a real leveller for people.”

Redditch isn’t unique in this.

Disposable incomes are being stretched if not annihilated across the country.

Interest rate rises mean that standards of living, in general, are being swept away.

And with them, people like Tony, who are becoming collateral damage.

Government ‘committed’ to HS2 after watchdog rates project as ‘unachievable’ | Politics News

HS2 has been rated as “unachievable” as part of an annual report from a government watchdog.

The Infrastructure and Projects Authority (IPA) gave the first two phases of the rail link – from London to Birmingham, and from Birmingham to Crewe, a “red” rating, saying the whole plan may need to be “reassessed”. Both legs have faced a series of delays.

The project has been hit by ever-increasing costs – with estimates rising from £33bn in 2010 to at least £71bn.

The initial opening date of 2026 has fallen back to 2033, with the line possibly not reaching Manchester until 2040.

The government announced further delays to HS2 earlier this year in an effort to “balance the books” after inflation hit the cost of materials.

But analysis exclusively leaked to Sky News showed the two-year pause in works would end up being three-and-a-half years, and was likely to cost the taxpayer at least £366m.

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The government announced earlier this year the construction of the HS2 will be delayed by two more years due to

In its report, the IPA said: “Successful delivery of [HS2] appears to be unachievable.”

The watchdog added there were “major issues with project definition, schedule, budget, quality and/or benefits delivery, which at this stage do not appear to be manageable or resolvable”.

As a result, it said the project “may need re-scoping and/or its overall viability reassessed”.

This latest criticism comes in the same month that HS2 Ltd’s chief executive, Mark Thurston, announced he would be resigning from his post in September.

A Department for Transport spokesman said: “Spades are already in the ground on HS2, with 350 construction sites, over £20bn invested to date and supporting over 28,500 jobs.

“We remain committed to delivering HS2 in the most cost-effective way for taxpayers.

“HS2 will bring transformational benefits for generations to come, improving connections and helping grow the economy.”

Cost of living crisis: Bank of England set to increase interest rates to levels not seen since 2008 | Business News

The Bank of England is expected to unveil the biggest interest rate rise since the 1980s today.

A hike of 0.75 percentage points is anticipated – pushing the base rate to 3%, levels that have not been seen since 2008.

If confirmed, this could push up mortgage bills for millions of people in the coming months.

Supermarket offers 1p ready meals – cost of living latest

This would also be the eighth time in a row that the Bank of England has hiked interest rates. Less than a year ago, the base rate was just 0.1%.

Earlier this month, the markets had predicted that today’s increase could be one whole percentage point – but sentiment has calmed since the mini-budget was reversed and Liz Truss resigned as prime minister.

The Bank of England is also set to release long-term inflation forecasts, which are expected to show that the cost of living next year will be much higher than its target of 2%.

Official figures released in September showed inflation hit 10.1% – matching a 40-year high seen in July – with much of this increase driven by rising food costs.

Through these rate hikes, the Bank of England is trying to bring core inflation under control, which excludes more volatile elements such as petrol and energy prices.

Analysts at Deutsche Bank have warned they expect the BoE’s forecasts to show “the economic outlook has deteriorated further”, adding: “Conditioned on market pricing, the UK economy will likely fall into a deeper and more prolonged recession.”

Read more:
Heating off, buying food with credit cards – the impact of rising prices
Thousands too ashamed to go to work because they can’t afford soap
Low-cost grocery prices rocket – which ones have gone up most

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‘Black hole’ in finances explained

Firms face ‘desperately difficult decisions,’ Labour warns

This afternoon, Labour’s shadow chancellor will warn that the latest interest rate rise will have a huge impact on consumers and companies alike.

Speaking at the Anthropy conference in Cornwall, Rachel Reeves will say: “Rising interest rates will mean families with already stretched budgets will be hit by higher mortgage payments. It will mean higher financing costs for businesses.

“For many firms who have had a tough couple of years, this will mean desperately difficult decisions about whether to carry on.

“And it will mean profound implications for growth as demand is sucked out of the economy – and even those firms that are keeping their head above water face difficult decisions about whether to invest or expand.”

Yesterday, a new poll carried about by Ipsos for Sky News revealed that more than a quarter of people have started using their credit cards to buy food – and a fifth have borrowed money to adjust to rising prices this year.

Read more:
Almost half of adults finding it difficult to afford their bills
Tesco raises meal deal price for first time in a decade
The very real costs of having a premature baby

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People putting food bills on credit

US also increases interest rates

The Bank of England’s decision will come a day after America’s central bank, the Federal Reserve, also confirmed that it will increase interest rates by 0.75 percentage points.

Wall Street fell sharply when Fed Chairman Jerome Powell suggested the US base rate may need to go even higher than previously thought to tackle the worst inflation seen in decades.

He warned: “It’s very premature, in my view, to think about or to be talking about pausing our rate hikes. We have a ways to go.”

Mr Powell also said that the Federal Reserve would rather make a mistake of taking interest rates too high than easing too quickly, amid fears that a premature pullback could cause inflation to remain.