
From Research to Action — How Finland Helped Its Men
Article here. Excerpt:
'In the last post, we saw how Finland took an extraordinary first step: instead of shrugging at suicide rates, they studied every single case in the country for a full year. They learned who was dying, where, and why.
But research alone doesn’t save lives. The true test came next. Could Finland turn this knowledge into action?
In 1992, the government launched the National Suicide Prevention Project, a sweeping, nationwide effort that would run for five years. Its ambition was bold: to translate the research into targeted interventions across every layer of society — from army barracks to hunting cabins, from classrooms to church pulpits.
The official goal was clear: reduce suicides by 20% in ten years. But the real innovation lay in how Finland went about it.'
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