Dear Editor,
As a public communications analyst and community advocate with over fifteen years of experience in volunteer counseling and supporting individuals affected by mental health challenges, I write with deep concern over the alarming number of suicide-related cases being recorded in Guyana for 2026. This situation demands immediate and sustained national attention, as lives continue to be lost and families left devastated.
It must be acknowledged that in 2024, the Government of Guyana increased the implementation of mental health programmes at the national level. These initiatives demonstrate a growing recognition of mental health as a public health priority, and they represent an important step in the right direction. Such efforts deserve recognition and support.
However, despite these measures, the continued rise in suicide cases suggests that existing systems are not reaching everyone who needs help. Too many individuals struggling with depression, abuse, workplace discrimination, family conflict, and social isolation remain unseen, unheard, and unsupported. This gap between policy and lived experience is deeply troubling.
Stigma and fear continue to silence victims, preventing them from seeking assistance early. In some cases, warning signs are overlooked by families, employers, and communities until it is too late. This highlights the urgent need for stronger community engagement, public education, and frontline intervention mechanisms that can identify risk before crisis occurs
In addition, many of our elderly citizens are facing mental health challenges as they grow older, and far too many are being abandoned, neglected, or mistreated by relatives who should be protecting them. Some elderly individuals have even expressed a desire to die rather than continue living under emotional abuse, disrespect, or humiliation. This is heartbreaking, and it must not be normalized in our society.
Guyana is at a critical moment. The foundation has been laid through national programs, but without urgent reinforcement, coordination, and community participation, more lives will be lost. We must act now—collectively and decisively—to ensure that no one, young or old, continues to fall through the cracks of our mental health system.