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ReviewJul 20, '08 12:47 AM
for everyone
Category:Other
Suicide is the second most cause of South Korean teenagers' deaths and nearly half of them jump to death from high-rise structures, the Ministry of Health, Welfare and Family Affairs said Sunday.

The ministry said 233 of 937 teenagers that died in 2006 took their own lives, while 357 of them died of cancer. Seventy-six drowned to death and 44 had heart failure.

About 47 percent of those who committed suicide jumped from apartments and other high-rise structures, while 37 percent choked themselves to death, the ministry said, citing the statistics from the National Police Agency.

Nearly 12 percent of the under-20 population that killed themselves during 2004-2006 are believed to have had trouble at school, while 7 percent died due to troubled relations with their parents. Six percent had symptoms of depression before killing themselves.

This is just one of the reasons we are hosting our camps here in Korea this summer. Our English Camp is next week and our Church Unity Camps are the following weeks. We appreciate your prayers as we seek to reach this generation of Korean teens for Christ!

Source: http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/news/nation/2008/07/113_27852.html


louisnicholes wrote on Jul 20, '08
We are praying for you and all involed in the English and Unity Camps!
busanron wrote on Jul 20, '08
Hi Mike!
I will be praying for you during English camp and the following weeks with the Church Unity Camps. God bless you, and strengthen you and encourage you as you reach out to the needy teens of Korea. Ron
wolk wrote on Jul 25, '08
Below is the latest being reported on suicides in Korea

Thirty-six South Koreans committed suicide per day last year on average, and the rate is continuing to surge amid the country's slowing economy, tight labor market and sweeping socioeconomic changes, a ruling party lawmaker said Thursday. Rep. Lim Doo-sung of the ruling Grand National Party said a total of 13,407 people killed themselves last year, an increase of 439 people from 2006, according to Yonhap News. Up to 56 percent of suicides were committed by the jobless, with the female suicide rate posting a 19-percent rise between 2003 and 2007, Lim said, citing police statistics.

Suicides now stand as the No. 4 cause of deaths in South Korea. South Korea's suicide rate has been the highest in the 30-nation Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) since 2005. An average of 25 out of every 100,000 people kill themselves in South Korea, followed by Hungary (22.6 persons), Japan (20.3 persons) and Belgium (18.4 persons).
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