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Barrier at Bloor Street Viaduct significantly reduced suicides, study suggests

Since the barrier was put in place, the study from Sunnybrook Hospital found only one person has died by suicide at the site.

2 min read
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Researchers say an average of nine people a year had been dying by jumping from the bridge before 2003, placing it behind only San Francisco’s Golden Gate Bridge for suicides-by-jumping.


A new study suggests a barrier erected on a Toronto overpass that was once the second-most frequented bridge for suicides in North America is serving its purpose.

The study from Sunnybrook Hospital, published in the journal BMJ Open on Tuesday, compares the 11-year periods before and after the barrier went up on the city’s Bloor Street Viaduct.

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