Monday, September 07, 2009

Hairdressers in Northern Ireland to be trained to spot suicidal clients

A suicide prevention group has recruited hairdressers and barbers to help spot vulnerable people who might be contemplating taking their own lives.

With World Suicide Awareness Day taking place later this week, an organisation set up to counter rising suicide rates in Northern Ireland has established a training course for hairdressing salons and barber shops across the province.

Staff at salons from Coleraine to north Belfast, which has seen a spate of suicides in recent years, are being asked to look out for customers who appear deeply depressed or voice thoughts about taking their own lives.

The north Belfast-based Public Initiative for the Prevention of Suicide and Self-harm (Pips) is holding a specialist training programme on 27 September for hair salon staff and barbers.

Philip McTaggart, Pips founder and chairperson, said the idea came about after volunteers in the Duncairn Gardens area of the city relayed stories they had heard while at the hairdresser. "It seems that when someone sits down in the chair to have their hair cut they will talk about anything, including things that they might feel uncomfortable speaking of to those they know," he said. "But they will open up to a stranger who is standing over them cutting their hair. So we went around various salons and asked staff about what sort of problems in their lives their customers talked about. What the staff told us was quite shocking."

McTaggart said the scheme involves training staff to notice when someone is vulnerable so they can suggest counselling and pass on cards and leaflets from organisations that might help. "The whole scheme is discreet. The leaflets are not spread about the salons like copies of Vogue or Cosmopolitan. If the scheme saves one life, it will be worth it," he said.

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