High Suicide Rates in Automotive
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention scientistsâ Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report dated December 15 of 2023, âthe 2021 suicide rate among United States persons of working age is approximately 33% higher than it was 2 decades ago. In 2021, a total of 37,602 persons (17.8 per 100,000 population) of working age (16â64 years, employed or unemployed) in the United States died by suicide, a rate increase of approximately 33% since 2001. To guide suicide prevention strategies among the working-age population, CDC analyzed 2021 suicide deaths by industry and occupation.â
âData from 49 states, excluding Rhode Island, were used to calculate suicide rates by sex for all major and detailed industry and occupational groups. Major industry and occupation groups with the highest suicide rates included Automotive service, installation, maintenance and repair technicians.â
Itâs no secret many individuals choosing the blue collar trades are born into disadvantaged and sometimes dysfunctional families and communities that leave them seeking calmness and focus by working with their hands. Unfortunately, itâs a mistake to choose a blue collar trade because little do they know that the blue collar trades like Automotive are hardly protected with unions to provide a decent living suitable for an American laborer. The lack of unionization in blue collar trades like Automotive contributes to suicide by failing to provide adequate training to promote each other into specialties, job security, a decent work-life balance, an outlet for stress, and protections from exposure to toxins. The long hours, low job control, financial insecurity and toxic chemical exposure are enough industry stressors to unionize over and yet, many Automotive service technicians fail to see the power of numbers in the field can potentially prevent such inadequacies in the form of unionization or at the minimum policy changes from within.
The new vehicle dealership management administration couldnât care less about the Automotive laborers and now label the lack of service technicians as a âshortageâ instead of holding themselves accountable for the missing workers in the field. The Automotive Industry is facing a serious decline in service technicians and the vehicle manufacturers have yet to hold themselves accountable too for the incompetence found in their engineering: no engineer has thought of working on their newly-designed vehicles because if they did, we service technicians wouldnât see half of what we do in a service bay. The new vehicle manufacturers and engineers instead short Automotive service technicians their service times and expect them to live off the minimal when the service technicians deserve more pay for their time.
The vehicle manufacturers and new vehicle manufacturer dealerships are constantly finding new ways to take advantage of the Automotive laborers and we have had enough. While they are busy finding ways to take advantage of us, we are busy investing in the company by purchasing the best tools, showing up to work in best and poor conditions, and having can-do attitudes no matter the cost to our personal safety. If we do not see the policy changes from within then let this podcast start the movement to instigate policy change in legislation and beyond in Americaâs legal systems.
Many of us Automotive service technicians have been posting on social media about the latest developments in our trade with no real impact. It is now time to write, speak and submit to our legal infrastructure in America to make the necessary changes in our blue collar trade with hope for the next generation of laborers that willingly choose Automotive.
Sussell A, Peterson C, Li J, Miniño A, Scott KA, Stone DM. Suicide Rates by Industry and Occupation â National Vital Statistics System, United States, 2021. MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep 2023;72:1346â1350. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.15585/mmwr.mm7250a2