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November 5, 2009

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Japanese railways go blue to cut suicides

ALARMED by a rise in people jumping to their deaths in front of trains, some Japanese railway operators are installing special blue lights above station platforms they hope will have a soothing effect and reduce suicides.

As of November, East Japan Railway Co has put blue light-emitting diode, or LED, lights in all 29 stations on Tokyo's central train loop, the Yamanote Line, used by 8 million passengers each day.

There's no scientific proof that the lights actually reduce suicides, and some experts are skeptical about it. But others say blue does have a calming effect on people.

"We associate the color with the sky and the sea," Mizuki Takahashi, a therapist at the Japan Institute of Color Psychology, a private research center that was not involved in the lighting project. "It has a calming effect on agitated people, or people obsessed with one particular thing, which in this case is committing suicide."

Suicide rates in Japan have risen this year amid economic woes, and could beat the record 34,427 deaths in 2003.

Last year, nearly 2,000 people committed suicide in Japan by jumping in front of a train, about 6 percent of such deaths nationwide.

In Tokyo, the number of suicides at stations run by East Japan rose to 68 for the year through March from 42 two years earlier. That's causing more train delays, with conductors describing them over public address systems as "human accidents."

East Japan has spent about 15 million yen (US$165,000), for the special lights at all the Yamanote stations.

The lights, which are brighter than standard fluorescent bulbs, bathe the platform below in an eerie blue light.

They hang at the end of each platform, a spot where people are most likely to throw themselves in front of a speeding train, said Norimitsu Suzuki, a company spokesman.

Another company, Keihin Electric Express Railway Co, which operates in Tokyo and Yokohama, also installed the blue lights at two stations last year after there were two suicides within a month at one of the two stations. "We thought we had to do something to save lives," a spokesman said.





 

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