DiscoverAspen Public RadioHigh Risk At High Altitude: The 'Paradise Paradox' And What It Means For Ski Town Mental Health
High Risk At High Altitude: The 'Paradise Paradox' And What It Means For Ski Town Mental Health

High Risk At High Altitude: The 'Paradise Paradox' And What It Means For Ski Town Mental Health

Update: 2021-02-16
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The Mountain West has some of the highest suicide rates in the United States. Colorado is no exception; the state has been in the top 10 for highest suicide rates in the country since 2009. Ski towns, in particular, have significantly higher rates of suicide than the national average. Mental health experts have called it the “paradise paradox,” and the University of Colorado’s School of Public Health cites factors ranging from financial instability, geographic isolation, lack of healthcare, easy access to firearms and the transient nature of resort communities as being some of the reasons communities in rural areas across the Mountain West continue to suffer from high suicide rates. In Aspen, that rate is two to three times the national average, according to CU’s School of Public Health.
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High Risk At High Altitude: The 'Paradise Paradox' And What It Means For Ski Town Mental Health

High Risk At High Altitude: The 'Paradise Paradox' And What It Means For Ski Town Mental Health

Kirsten Dobroth