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Community takes action after deaths


Associated Press Writer
Article Last Updated; Monday, November 02, 2009  8:51AM

	Henry M. Gunn High School students stick Post-it notes with messages around the school campus in Palo Alto, Calif., on Saturday. The students created a student-run support group ROCK, or Reach Out. Care. Know., after three Gunn students committed suicide.
Photo by TONY AVELAR/AP

Henry M. Gunn High School students stick Post-it notes with messages around the school campus in Palo Alto, Calif., on Saturday. The students created a student-run support group ROCK, or Reach Out. Care. Know., after three Gunn students committed suicide.


PALO ALTO, Calif. (AP) - Grim news hit this university town in late October just two days before a PTA forum on teenage stress: Another Palo Alto teen had died after stepping in front of a commuter train, the fourth such suicide in less than six months.

With hundreds of parents crowding the forum, school Superintendent Kevin Skelly told the anxious gathering that the latest death was "a cruel irony" because city officials were working to prevent another tragedy. "We have all experienced situations where, despite every effort, results fall short of our hopes," Skelly said.

Experts have struggled to understand what generates clusters of teen suicides, a phenomenon that breaks into a community's awareness when they occur in a public place, as they did in Palo Alto. But officials in this San Francisco peninsula city of about 59,000 say they're deploying a wide array of approaches to stop it from growing.

Those efforts are moving with greater urgency since the most recent suicide Oct. 19 that involved a 16-year-old male student at Henry M. Gunn High School. Two other Gunn students, a 17-year-old boy in May and a 17-year-old girl a month later, also took their own lives on the train tracks. A 13-year-old girl died the same way in August, days before she was to become a Gunn freshman. At least one Gunn student, another 17-year-old boy, was prevented from killing himself in June after his mother followed him to the tracks.

"There is no single answer. There is not necessarily a cumulative set of answers either," said Greg Hermann, a spokesman for Palo Alto, which convened a task force of psychologists, clergy and others to prepare a response plan. "There are intelligent steps we can be taking." Police patrol the tracks while city officials negotiate with the railroad on a design to make them less accessible. Students are discouraged from erecting shrines at the sites, which might romanticize the deaths, and the media has been asked not to make public those locations.

Some of the high school's 1,900 students also have created T-shirts with the message "Talk to Me" and formed pacts not to harm themselves. One student left bracelets made of heart-shaped walnut shells for others in need of cheering up to find. A group posts optimistic notes around campus.

Joyce Liu, a 17-year-old senior, created a peer-run support group that staffs a table during free periods and hosts a social networking site where classmates can find someone to listen. She also created a Web site called "Henry M. Gunn Gives Me Hope," where teachers and students share random acts of kindness and beauty that have come their way.

"A lot of the time, the problem is no one really knows the exact reason why someone would step on the tracks," she said. "People keep on searching for answers, but sometimes you won't ever really know because the person is not here anymore." Vastly different communities that have been in the same situation also had valuable lessons to offer. One that resonated deeply in Palo Alto was that suicide can be contagious and should be treated as a public-health crisis.

Merily Keller, a founder of the Texas Suicide Prevention Council, tried to "prevent a downward spiraling of grief" when her 18-year-old son became the fifth and last boy to die in a suicide cluster in Austin, Texas, in 2000. She and her husband buried him at a family ranch so his friends could not gather at his grave site without adult supervision.

"One of the biggest risk factors is knowing another kid who has died by suicide," said Keller, who described that particular warning sign as having "a different quality." "It's like juggling something - if you have too many risk factors, they are going to crash," she said.

Suicide is the third-leading cause of death among people between the ages of 15 and 24 in the United States, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. But school, social stress, romantic problems or even having a classmate who died by suicide are rarely big enough triggers alone to cause a teenager to end his or her life, said Madeline Gould, a Columbia University psychiatrist. She found evidence of 50 suicide clusters nationwide between 1987 and 1996.

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