Written By: April Baumgarten
Julie Blehm, a Fargo physician, lost her husband and popular pediatrician David Blehm to #suicide in 2011. She conducts seminars for fellow physicians about noticing #depression in colleagues. David Samson / The Forum
Editor’s note: If you or a loved one is in crisis, you can call the #NationalSuicidePreventionLifeline at 1-800-273-8255 (1-800-273-TALK).
FARGO — In Dr. Julie Blehm’s home in south Fargo, the memories of her husband, David, are still present.
Art pieces the two collected together hang on the walls. The table where he kept piles of books still sits in the dining room.
To her, Dr. David Blehm was the most interesting man she had met. She didn’t see any sign her pediatrician husband was so unhappy that he would end his life.
“I never thought he was suicidal,” she said. “I just never had that feeling.”Dr. Julie Blehm talks about her husband’s #suicide
While on a business trip, David Blehm’s employer called and told her he did not show up for work. She later learned that he took his own life on Nov. 7, 2011. He was 59.
“I think, so many people respected you as a pediatrician and appreciated the reading lists you gave to their children and all these different things. How could you have been so unhappy that you did this?” she asked.
Middle-aged white #men, like David Blehm, have the highest rate of #suicide among any group in the U.S., according to the #AmericanFoundationforSuicidePrevention. In 2017, #whitemen made up almost 70% of #suicide deaths in the U.S., and middle-aged groups rise to the top when it comes to rates, the organization said.
Working-aged #men make up the largest portion of #suicide fatalities in North Dakota, said Alison Traynor, North Dakota’s #suicideprevention director. In Minnesota, middle-aged #men also are at an increased risk, according to the Minnesota Department of Health.
White #men in the U.S. have a culture of being the breadwinners and protectors of their families, said Dr. Liza Tupa, a clinical psychologist who’s studied #suicide. They also are taught to “pull themselves up by their bootstraps” instead of seeking help, said Tupa, education and research director for the Western Interstate Commission for Higher Education in Boulder, Colo.
Julie Blehm asked her husband to seek help after she noticed he was drinking more in the years leading up to his death, but he said he could deal with it by himself.
After his death, she talked with her son, who said he realized his father probably felt he may have failed at some things in his life, she said. “Here he was middle-aged … kind of nearing the end of his career and thinking, ‘I really didn’t do as well with all of this as I thought I would,’” she said.
Julie Blehm, a physician who specializes in caring for the elderly, has told her husband’s story to educate medical professionals, and she’s played a role in initiating changes in North Dakota to encourage doctors to get the treatment they need.
“It doesn’t mean you’re an awful person. It doesn’t mean you’re weak. It means that you have an illness,” she said. “I think that is the most important thing.”
The numbers ‘woke us up’
North Dakota and Minnesota do not specifically track #suicide rates for middle-aged white #men, but both states monitor trends by race, gender and age.
White people made up 85% of the deaths by #suicide in 2018 in North Dakota. The same year, the #suicide rate for whites in North Dakota was 20 per 100,000, according to the state Health Department. That’s above the national rate of almost 16 per 100,000, according to the #CentersforDiseaseControlandPrevention.
Whites in Minnesota accounted for 91% of #suicides in 2017, the latest figure from the state’s Department of Health. #Suicide rates by year were not available, but the rate for 2013-2017 among whites in Minnesota was 13.4 per 100,000, second only to American Indians with 23.2.
Since 2000, the rate of #men taking their own lives has remained higher compared with #women in North Dakota and Minnesota. #Men were four times more likely to kill themselves compared with #women, according to data from both states.
“I think that the numbers that came from North Dakota … I think they woke us up as a state,” said Thomasine Heitkamp, project co-director and principal investigator for Mountain Plains Mental Health Technology Transfer Center in Grand Forks. “I think that we started to dig a little deeper into the causes.”
Middle-aged white #men are exposed to various risk factors, such as economic stress, chronic health conditions and the pressures of succeeding, Tupa said. A lack of access to treatment, especially in rural areas, also is troubling, experts said.
“How do you turn reaching out for help into a strength?” Tupa said. “That’s the message I think that we have to give everyone, but especially … to this group.”
How to raise awareness
To solve the complex issue of #suicide, everyone needs to come together to remove barriers to treatment, provide #suicideprevention training and expand communities’ abilities to discuss the topic, experts said.
With guns contributing to 50% of suicides in the U.S., there should be more discussion of what measures can be taken to keep guns away from people who have suicidal thoughts, said Gina Brimner, director of veterans initiatives for WICHE.
David Blehm shot himself with a gun he owned, and his wife agreed there needs to be more education about firearms and #suicideprevention. “It’s a difficult conversation in many states because it gets confused with gun control,” Brimner said, but those conversations could save a life.
David Blehm (Submitted photo)
Media campaigns can help bring awareness, Heitkamp said. She mentioned outreach efforts at grain elevators, churches and other places where #men in rural America go.
North Dakota State University Extension Service partnered with Lutheran Social Services to make an educational handout for farmers and ranchers. The wallet-sized card is called “bootstraps,” and it features a pair of worn boots with information about depression, the people it affects and what to do to get help.
“We’ve actually used that bootstraps mentality as a way to reach people,” said Sean Brotherson, an extension family science specialist at NDSU.
Research shows working in agriculture is one of the most stressful occupations. Uncontrollable factors can decide the success of a farmer or rancher, and that’s compounded by exhausting work, long hours, financial stresses and isolation, Brotherson said.
Farmers are raised in a culture of dealing with issues privately and minimizing the severity of health concerns, Brotherson said. But he has been encouraged recently as more people are recognizing that #mentalhealth concerns are common and that they are treatable if a person seeks help.
‘#Man Therapy’
“Did you know that men have feelings, too?” a mustachioed #man asks while sitting in an office that looks like a cross between an attorney’s office and a #man cave. “And no, not just the hippies. All of us! Hello, I’m Dr. Rich Mahogany. Welcome to #Man Therapy.”
The fictional doctor is the star of mantherapy.org, a website created by the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment with the aim of helping #men address #mentalillness. The website has statistics, testimonials, tools to assess #mentalhealth and a little bit of edgy humor.
“What the initial research showed is that there was a need for a different type of messaging that was more engaging with #men, and it was scrubbed of some of that sterile, traditional #mentalhealth jargon,” said Sarah Brummett, Colorado’s #suicideprevention director. “It needed to resonate with #men a little bit differently.”
#Man Therapy is a website created by the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment with the aim of helping men address mental illness. Special to The Forum
Men now have an anonymous place to seek information, and the website shows “manly men” who have struggled with #mentalhealth. “It highlights that having a #mentalhealth challenge doesn’t mean you’re less of a #man,” she said.
The website has had almost a million visitors since its launch in 2012, Brummett said. Man Therapy could reach more people if there was more funding to promote it, but it has received great feedback, she said.
Colorado’s overall #suicide rate in 2017, the latest year available, was roughly the same as it was in 2012 — about 20 #suicides per 100,000 people. While the number hasn’t gone up, officials there say a collaborative effort is needed to drive the rate down.
Man Therapy is a fantastic program, Traynor said. But North Dakota’s data shows #suicide doesn’t discriminate, she said.
North Dakota’s #suicide prevention program was moved from the state Department of Health to the Behavioral Health Division in July, meaning staff are building “a lot of things from the ground up,” Traynor said. The state is starting to create the foundation for intervention services, she added.
“With our limited resources, what we’re trying to do is address factors that really impact all populations,” she said. #Physicians at greater risk of #suicide
‘You did the best you can’
Just hours before Julie Blehm was interviewed for this story, she sat at a conference room table in Sanford Medical Center, hosting a seminar on provider #depression and #suicide with the University of North Dakota School of Medicine and Health Sciences.
She shared her husband’s story — his struggle with alcohol, the idea that he didn’t want to admit he couldn’t handle his problems by himself, the guilt and anger that came with his death and how she came to accept it all.
“I have to talk about him,” she said. “We can’t avoid this subject forever.”
With help from a psychologist and an #AmericanFoundationforSuicidePrevention support group, she was able to express her anger at her late husband, that she hated him when he drank — without judgment. She now serves as a board member for the AFSP North Dakota chapter.
Statistics show that physicians are at a greater risk of #suicide than the general public. Thanks to Julie Blehm and others, doctors now don’t have to report to the state licensing board that they are struggling with #mentalillness or substance abuse if they voluntarily seek help through the North Dakota Professional Health Program.
She said multiple factors likely played into her husband’s death, but maybe the reporting change would have saved him.
People who have lost someone to #suicide will likely feel a range of emotions, and they may wonder what they could have done differently to prevent it, Julie Blehm said.
Those people are not alone, she emphasized.
“A final thought is, for people who are survivors of someone who has killed themselves that they cared for and love, I think you did the best you can,” she said. “Remember, you tried. You did the best you were able to do at the time, and it is not your fault.”
#JamesDonaldson notes:
Welcome to the “next chapter” of my life… being a voice and an advocate for #mentalhealthawarenessandsuicideprevention, especially pertaining to our younger generation of students and student-athletes.
Getting men to speak up and reach out for help and assistance is one of my passions. Us men need to not suffer in silence or drown our sorrows in alcohol, hang out at bars and strip joints, or get involved with drug use.
Having gone through a recent bout of #depression and #suicidalthoughts myself, I realize now, that I can make a huge difference in the lives of so many by sharing my story, and by sharing various resources I come across as I work in this space. #http://bit.ly/JamesMentalHealthArticle
James Donaldson is a Washington State University graduate (’79). After an outstanding basketball career with WSU, he went on to play professional basketball in the NBA with the Seattle Supersonics, San Diego/L.A. Clippers, Dallas Mavericks, New York Knicks, and Utah Jazz. He also played for several teams in the European Leagues in Spain, Italy, and Greece, and he toured with The Harlem Globetrotters to wrap up his career. James was an NBA All-Star in 1988 while playing center for the Dallas Mavericks. In 2006, James was inducted into the Pac-10 Sports Hall of Fame and also the Washington State University Athletic Hall of Fame. In 2010, James was elected as a board member for the NBA Retired Players Association.
James frequently conducts speaking engagements (motivational, inspirational, educational) for organizations, schools, and youth groups.
In 2010, James was the recipient of the NBA Legends of Basketball ABC Award, awarded for outstanding contributions in Athletics–Business–Community.
He believes in being a role model for success and professionalism to the scores of young people to whom he devotes so much of his time. He currently serves on several boards and committees and is a member of many organizations.
James believes in developing relationships that create a “Win-Win” environment for everyone involved, and in being the best he can be!
For more information about James Donaldson or to request he speak at your event, contact him at:
www.StandingAboveTheCrowd.com
[email protected]
1-800-745-3161 (voicemail & fax)
James Donaldson is the author of “Standing Above The Crowd” and “Celebrating Your Gift of Life” and founder of the Your Gift of Life Foundation which focuses on mental health awareness and suicide prevention, especially pertaining to our school aged children and men.
If you’re interested in having James come and speak to your group of young adults, business entrepreneurs, aspiring political and community leaders, and athletic teams, please contact him at [email protected] and or leave a personal message for him at 1-800-745-3161. Keep up with him and read about how he is reaching out and making a difference in the lives of so many around the world at www.yourgiftoflife.org