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Experts say it’s crucial to “gain time,” since suicide is hesitant until the very end

It is crucial to “gain time” so that a person with suicidal tendencies might think of other options since they are “ambivalent” right up until the very last minute, questioning whether to carry out the deed and even regretting it.
During the panel discussion “Suicide prevention is possible” at the EFE Forum “New challenges in mental health after the Dana,” which was organised by the EFE Agency in partnership with Johnson & Johnson and 8 Mediterráneo, psychiatrists Jesús Enrique Mesones and Eduardo Jesús Aguilar brought attention to this.
Experts estimate that there is one suicide fatality for every thirty attempts, but that “contagion effect” can be avoided with adequate and constructive communication: “More than saving lives, we actually help people save their lives.”
“Just by listening to people who have these kinds of problems we can do a lot from our consultations, carry out an intervention without being a super specialist,” said Mesones, vice president of the Spanish Society of Suicidology, professor at the Catholic University of Murcia, and head of the Psychiatry Service at Torrevieja Hospital.
He says that although most suicide victims “want to stop suffering, very few do so consciously and behind every suicide there is usually a mental pathology,” half of suicides are caused by depression.
The impacted individuals also visit their primary care physician. According to Eduardo Jesús Aguilar, a psychiatrist at the Hospital Clínico de Valencia, a professor at the University of Valencia, and a researcher at Cibersam and Incliva, primary care physicians are responsible for obtaining “sufficient information to be able to make the first entry” during those ten minutes of patient care.
According to Mesones, the individual who kills themselves “is ambivalent until the last moment,” citing instances where those who attempt suicide by jumping off a bridge express regret at the last minute. According to him, “at the time of the acute intervention, the essential thing is to gain time so that they can consider other ways out.”
Additionally, Aguilar thinks it’s critical to recognise that suicide behaviour “is characteristically fluctuating, even though it’s chronic,” and that in the ER, “they know that if they give enough time there is an upswing and a downswing.”
Mesones claims that a suicidal person who has attempted suicide and is in the emergency room has the chance to receive treatment during a waiting period known as “chronotherapy”: “We have the opportunity to be able to address them and we must have the capacity, training and sufficient education to assist them.”
Lithium salts for bipolar disorder patients, clozapine, an atypical antipsychotic for schizophrenia patients, and esketamine for depression patients are the only treatments that have been demonstrated to help prevent suicidal behaviour, according to Mesones. “A study conducted in several Spanish centres reflects the effectiveness of this drug in improving suicidal thoughts, which is very promising,” Mesones said.
A loss, a breakup, an existential crisis, abuse, or mistreatment are some of the things that could hasten this decision, according to Mesones. He explains that while many situations can lead someone to “think that the help they are going to receive is not worth it,” “fortunately not all people who think about suicide do so, the rate is 2%.”
Aguilar says that we need to observe how it changes “and that the rates for women do not rise, but that for men they fall,” in addition to the fact that we have tools to prevent and treat suicide because of the innovation of companies like those sponsoring this event. He says that 70% of suicides are men and 30% are women, for which there may be a variety of reasons.
Disasters like the Dana disaster, which create a sense of “unity” and the impulse to aid others, “protect at first” those who are contemplating suicide, according to the vice president of the Spanish Society of Suicidology.
“It has made many people abandon that idea and start helping families, but that is my perception, there will be no data on that,” says Mesones, who further states that “in the future, if mental illness increases, it will lead to suicides.” EFE
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Two arrested in Elda for stealing from restaurants and hostels

Two individuals, a man and a woman, have been apprehended by the National Police in Elda. They are accused of thieving from two establishments in the town, namely a restaurant and a bar.
The 39-year-old is accused of robbing a restaurant, swiping a cash register containing €1,750 after forcing open the establishment’s metal shutter to gain access.
The 35-year-old, in turn, robbed a bar, escaping with €800 in cash, a cigarette machine valued at €2,000 that contained packets of cigarettes worth nearly €1,200, and several bottles of alcoholic beverages, bringing the total stolen to over €5,000.
A second individual, whom they are also endeavouring to apprehend and locate, was present with the woman who was apprehended.
In other news, the National Police announced on Tuesday 18th March that the individual arrested for the robbery at the restaurant in the Medio Vinalopó municipality was in the Foncalent prison in Alicante. He had been detained during the investigation for incidents unrelated to the current case.
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In Torrevieja and Murcia, 158,000 ecstasy pills and 15 kilos of drugs seized

Thirty-three arrests, 158,000 ecstasy tablets, ten kilogrammes of speed, two kilogrammes of cocaine, three kilogrammes of crystal meth, 40,000 euros, two firearms, and a tablet-forming machine for pill production. Several phases of an anti-drug operation were conducted by the National Police of Murcia, culminating in the arrest of five individuals and the thwarting of a transaction involving over one hundred thousand ecstasy pills in Torrevieja at the end of last February. The officers employed their service weapons to apprehend the traffickers.
The investigation, which has so far yielded 33 convictions in municipalities in the Region of Murcia and Torrevieja, is being overseen by a Cartagena court. However, the case remains unresolved, and the police are currently in the process of identifying additional suspects. The court in Cartagena ordered that all five of the individuals arrested in Torrevieja be detained in pretrial detention.
The Torrevieja operation occurred at the end of February last year. The National Police were pursuing a suspect from Cartagena whose vehicle had been geolocated with judicial authorisation. Officers monitored this individual, who goes by the alias Peter, as he arrived at the open-air parking lot of a Torrevieja supermarket. They also observed his interactions with other individuals who arrived in various vehicles.
The surveillance was augmented by additional police officers after the officers observed a consistent flow of individuals between the parking lot and a café. Later, an unknown individual arrived at the scene in an Opel Vectra, received directions, and proceeded to a residence on Calle Santa Petra in Torrevieja. Upon arrival, two individuals exited the vehicle, entered the residence, and emerged seconds later with a large bag and two suitcases.
The Opel Vectra continued to drive under the watchful eye of the authorities and subsequently proceeded to Calle Ciprés in the Torrevieja district of La Mata. It entered an underground garage, and a few minutes later, the suspect from Cartagena, who was being observed in the supermarket parking lot, and several other individuals departed in multiple vehicles and proceeded to Calle Ciprés.
Upon reaching Calle Ciprés, they parked outside the garage and the occupants of the vehicles exited. The driver of the Opel Vectra emerged from the underground garage shortly thereafter. After momentarily conversing with Peter and another individual, he entered the parking lot, while the remaining individuals remained on the street, serving as counter-surveillance.
One of the officers on patrol was able to enter the garage through a pedestrian access door and he observed the Opel Vectra’s trunk being tampered with. Peter and his companion exited the garage and hastily made their way to his vehicle a few moments later. The officers were observed by those conducting counter-surveillance while they were attempting to follow Peter.
One of them began to flee, exclaiming, “Run, police, run!” At that moment, Peter extracted a bag from his private parts that contained 91 ecstasy pills of varying colours and logos, including Porsche and Philipp Plein, and flung it to the ground in an attempt to flee in his vehicle.
The plainclothes officers identified themselves as police officers; however, all parties involved obeyed the investigators’ warnings and fled. One of the officers was wounded during the suspects’ attack, and the investigators fired warning bullets to prevent their escape.
The police operation led to the arrest of five individuals, and a search of the car parked in the underground parking lot yielded just over 100,000 ecstasy pills of the same variety as those confiscated from Peter outside. Subsequently, the police conducted further investigations in Torrevieja and confiscated an additional substantial quantity of ecstasy.
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Car catches fire at a petrol station in Elche

On Monday, March 17, at noon, a small van set alight in the vicinity of the petrol station pumps on the road from Santa Pola to Elche, at the exit from the EL-20 highway.
The Provincial Consortium has dispatched two fire personnel to extinguish the fire that has consumed the vehicle.
Fortunately, the fire crews’ prompt response prevented the fire from encroaching on the petrol station premises, thereby preventing a potentially hazardous situation. Consequently, only material damage was documented.
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