www.reuters.com Online edition of International Press Service =
BERLIN (Reuters) – German society and the economy stand to benefit from the influx of hundreds of thousands of refugees, Chancellor Angela Merkel said on Thursday, repeating her optimistic mantra “we can do this.”
In her New Year address to the nation, Merkel acknowledged that the integration of migrants, many of them Muslims fleeing war in the Middle East, would cost Germany “time, strength and money.” But the country was strong enough to cope, she said, pointing to low unemployment and rising wages.
“I am convinced that if we tackle the formidable task posed by the influx and integration of so many people in the right way today, then this will represent an opportunity for us tomorrow,”Merkel said in the text of a speech supplied by the government before she spoke.
“It’s true, we live in challenging times. But it’s also true that we can do this, because Germany is a strong country.”
Germany has taken in just over a million migrants this year, far more than any other European country. Merkel is one of the few European leaders to welcome them, arguing that Germany has a duty to shelter people fleeing conflict and persecution.
She has repeatedly rebuffed pressure to clamp down along German borders, telling Germans “wir schaffen das,” or “we can do this.”
This stance led Time magazine to name Merkel its “Person of the Year” earlier this month. But at home, where local communities have complained of being overwhelmed by the influx, her own popularity ratings and support for her conservative party have suffered.
Suicide is the tenth leading cause of death in the United States. And the suicide rate has grown slightly over the past decade. But a group of psychiatrists and health care professionals is working to change this trend. They’ve launched an initiative that aims to reduce the number of suicides to zero. It sounds impossible. But a health system in Michigan is reporting impressive results. After overhauling the way it screens and treats patients, it reduced the number of suicides by eighty percent. And one year, no suicides were reported. Now others are trying to replicate this success. Diane and a panel of guests discuss the “Zero Suicide” initiative.
Guests
- Julie Goldstein Grumet clinical psychologist, and director, Health and Behavioral Health Initiative, Suicide Prevention Resource Center at the Education Development Center
- David Jobes professor of psychology, Catholic University, and clinical psychologist
- Brian Ahmedani director of psychiatry research, behavioral health services department, Henry Ford Health System in Michigan
- Diana Cortez Yanez public speaker on suicide prevention strategies. She has been treated for being suicidal and depressed.