A recent data report from the United States vital statistics system looked at suicide rates across the country. It measured the age-adjusted suicide rate for the entire U.S. population in the year 2017. The main finding was that this rate was 14.0 deaths by suicide for every 100,000 people in the population.
This type of report is called surveillance data. Its main purpose is to describe what happened in a specific time period. It does not study why these deaths occurred or test any specific programs or treatments that might prevent them. The report did not include information on safety concerns related to specific interventions, as it was not that type of study.
The main reason to be careful with this information is that it shows a snapshot from one year. It cannot tell us if rates are going up or down over time, and it cannot point to causes. Readers should see this as a basic measurement of a serious public health issue from 2017. It is a starting point for understanding the scale of the challenge, not an answer about solutions.