Advocates call for a rethink on the factors driving male suicide
There are urgent calls for more customised support services for men and boys experiencing situational distress.
Paul Withall took the #2500toomany pop-up shoe memorial to the regional town of Sale. (ABC News: Rachael Lucas)
Suicide awareness advocates want a broader focus on men's suicide risk factors that are not linked to diagnosed mental health conditions.
Australian Bureau of Statistics figures show 3,307 people died by suicide in 2024, 2,529 of whom were men.
Advocates have welcomed Victoria's decision to appoint a minister for men and boys.
On an overcast, melancholy Friday morning, 2,500 lone boots and sneakers are spread out across an oval in a regional town.
Each represents one of the male suicides that occur across Australia each year.
Inside them sit photos of young, fit men in the prime of their lives, who died by suicide.
Nearby, a handful of heartbroken families gather to view the pop-up memorial at the showgrounds in Sale, in Gippsland, about 210 kilometres east of Melbourne.
Situational distress is the leading cause of male suicide in Australia. (ABC News: Rachael Lucas)
The memorial is the work of the Zero Suicide Community Awareness Program, a volunteer initiative that campaigns for the mental health and welfare of men and boys.
Its founder, Paul Withall, who curated the first visual presentation of 2,500 shoes on the lawn of Parliament House on National Men's Day in 2022, said Gippsland had one of the highest male suicide rates in Victoria.
The memorial comes as Victoria has appointed its first minister for men and boys.
In 2024, 3,307 people died by suicide in Australia, including 2,529 men and 778 women, according to Australian Bureau of Statistics figures.
Advocates want suicide prevention programs to acknowledge the link between situational distress and suicide. (ABC News: Rachael Lucas)
Mr Withall said situational distress, the term for life complications that are not linked to a diagnosed mental health problem, was a key risk factor for male suicide.
Paul Withall has begun travelling from town to town with the pop-up shoe memorial, raising awareness of male suicide. (ABC News: Rachael Lucas)
"Relationship breakdowns are at the top of the scale. A contributing factor to around 43.1 per cent of all male suicide comes back to relationship breakdown," he said.
He said support services did not exist for men affected by situational issues.
His approach echoes findings of a 2017 report by researchers from Western Sydney University and the Australian Institute of Male Health and Studies.
The report called for a new approach to suicide prevention, which acknowledges the link between situational distress and suicide.
It found the
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