To the Editor: In his editorial published in the August 2009 issue of the Journal, Yeates Conwell, M.D. (1), a distinguished geriatric psychiatrist and suicidologist, stated that since "the leading edge of the large post-World War II 'baby boom' cohort will reach the age of 65 in 2011, demographers predict a rapid rise in the number of seniors taking their own lives in subsequent decades" (1, p. 845). This is undoubtedly correct—a larger number of individuals would be predicted to produce a larger absolute number of total suicides, even if the rates were to remain constant. However, more alarming is the possibility that the completed suicide rates per 100,000 individuals in this cohort may rise when they become seniors, resulting in far more suicides in this enlarged population than predicted on the basis of size alone.