Youth Suicide: Risk and Protective Factors

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Youth Suicide: Risk and Protective Factors Risk Factors for Youth Suicide 1. Unrecognized, untreated, or undertreated depression and bipolar disorder. One in 6 people with severe depression and one in 5 people with bipolar disorder will die by suicide (over the lifespan. For depression, a combination of medication and Cognitive Behavioral Therapy is the most effective form of therapy more effective than either treatment alone. Used in combination, more young people get better and they stay better longer. 14 And those who have attempted suicide and were treated with CBT are 50% less likely to attempt again. 4 Unfortunately, this combination of treatments is not what happens: two-thirds of children do not see a therapist within a month of beginning drug treatment and more than half still have not had a mental health visit by three months. (Medco, 2003 data) CBT is especially effective at reducing hopelessness, one of the most important risk factors for suicide in a individual who is depressed. In addition, parental depression is a risk factor from both genetic and modeling influences. 25 For bipolar disorder, a combination of medication and psychoeducation is most effective at reducing relapse and hospitalizations. Lack of access to mental health resources remains a significant problem across the state. 2. Contagion. Mass media coverage does influence suicide. Youth much more susceptible to imitative self-harm (contagion) than are people in other age groups (6.9% vs. 0.5% in adults). 21, 19, 21 This risk is 30 times greater if there is a gun in the home. 21 Peer suicidal behavior seems to promote a perceived norm that suicide is a commonplace response to distress. 13 Adolescents who have a friend attempt are 2-3 times more likely to make an attempt themselves. 9 In youth exposed to suicide, even 6 years after the death, those with traumatic grief showed 5 times higher rate of suicidal ideation, even controlling for depression. 19 3. Childhood trauma especially physical abuse, sexual abuse and severe neglect. Trauma in childhood can have profound and lasting impact on the brain, both by disrupting normal, healthy, developmental experiences and by causing potentially lifelong changes in the anatomy and physiology of the brain. The greater the number of traumas, the greater the person s lifetime risk of depression and suicide, especially among people who experienced five or more adverse childhood events. The more severe the traumas, the greater the risk as well. Of all types of child maltreatment, sexual abuse causes the highest risk of depression and suicide, 25 times greater risk than for those without such history. 11 4. Presence of a firearm in the home. More children and teens die by firearms than by any other method. NC has slightly higher rates of suicide deaths by guns, because of the rural nature of the state. The lethality of the method used is critical in whether the person lives or dies. Because 8 of 10 attempts with a firearm are lethal, the combination of the impulsivity of young people and the lethality of a firearm is often deadly. In homes where there are guns, there are more gun deaths. Risk of imitation is 30 times greater if there is a gun in the home. 21, 26, 27

Recommendations for decreasing Risk Factors for Youth Suicide: 1. Reduce barriers and increase access to mental health treatment: a. Increase affordable health care, b. decrease stigma toward getting treatment (increase acceptability of help seeking), c. increase the number of child psychiatrists in the state, d. increase public education about the illnesses that predispose youth to suicide 2. Encourage news coverage that describes the resources and support available in the community, encourages help-seeking, and addresses the risk and protective factors for youth suicide. Work with media to increase awareness of the characteristics of news coverage that contribute to contagion, so that it can be avoided: simplistic explanations, excessive coverage, focusing on the person s positive characteristics, sensationalistic coverage (how-to descriptions, photographs of site/funeral), front-page coverage) 16 3. Renewed public awareness and education about safe gun storage and its rationale. 4. Encourage lethal means discussion between clinicians and consumers (between primary physicians, psychiatrists, social workers, psychologists, mental health practitioners and their patients). Clinicians should talk about means restriction (temporarily storing a gun elsewhere), use of gun safes, and use of gun locks with patients as important ways to reduce access to lethal means. 5. Targeting prevention efforts toward at risk populations, including children in foster care (who have been victims of sexual abuse/physical abuse/neglect), children whose parents have depressive disorders, etc. 6. Continuing public education on sexual abuse prevention (Darkness to Light, Good Touch/Bad Touch/Private Touch), and on mandatory reporting for all citizens who suspect abuse / neglect of a minor.

Protective Factors for Youth Suicide 1. Research has shown that many of the skills that protect kids from depression and suicide are learned skills and can be easily taught by adults in the child s life: Social skills (making friends, reading social situations) Optimism (good humor and playfulness) Managing stress and emotions (calm self when upset or angry, motivate self) Assertiveness (being clear about personal feelings, limits) Empathy (understanding how another would feel) Taking responsibility (apologizing, not blaming others) Negotiating (compromising, feeling some control/power) 11, 17, 18, 27 In school based programs where classes for these specific skills were taught to 5 th and 6 th graders, the children who received training were half as likely to develop depression. 20 2. In high school students, two important protective factors are the: Quality and density of relationship ties Social norms that develop in the relationship groups in which adolescents interact Social connectedness reduces risk through: 1) increased monitoring of behavior by others, 2) enhanced psychological well-being, 3) exposure to normative social influences that encourage adaptive coping strategies. 1, 3, 5, 7 3. Having three or more of the following protective factors reduces the risk of suicide in adolescents by 70-85%: Perception that an important adult cares about them School connectedness (teachers treat them fairly, feel part of school) School safety (feels safe at school) Parental presence before and after school Parent / family connectedness / caring GPA Religious identity (faith affiliation) Counseling services provided by the school A number of parent/child activities 11, 22

Recommendations for increasing Protective Factors for Youth Suicide: 1. Increase gatekeeper training: teaching those who work with youth (teachers, faith community youth leaders, Scout leaders, after-school providers) what symptoms to look for and how to intervene. ASSIST and QPR are two such well-recognized programs. Talk to Me (a program of the Trevor Project) promotes a similar approach. SOS encourages teens to serve as gatekeepers for each other and encourages help-seeking. 2. Provide universal skills training for preteens in social skills, emotion regulation, and optimism to protect them from the stresses that make them vulnerable to depression and suicide later as adolescents and adults. 3. Encourage healthy extra-curricular activities for all children/teens to increase both school connectedness and social connectedness. At school and outside of school, encourage participation in and reduce financial barriers to children s involvement in sports teams, clubs, faith-based youth groups, band, choir, orchestra, Scouts, etc. 4. Increase efforts to prevent bullying in schools and in cyberspace. 5. Have postvention plans in place in school systems, mental health facilities, residential group homes, etc. Treat all deaths of young people in these settings comparably. Monitoring and Using Social Media 82% of teens are now on Social Networking sites (Pew data, 2000). These sites have both benefits and risks. Some are excellent sites that have been developed to help young people who are struggling with suicidal thoughts (as well as other mental health concerns.) These chats occur on secure sites. 8, 9 ReachOut.com thetrevorproject.org GoAskAlice.columbia.edu 18 But for many youth, online discussion forums are a source of risk. While many people do offer help when someone posts about thinking of suicide, some others openly encourage the person to go through with the act. 2, 15 Recommendations: 1. Promote safety guidelines for organizations, schools, and agencies regarding monitoring of social networking sites and their use following the death of a young person by suicide, i.e. don t use Facebook or Twitter to announce news of suicide deaths; don t give details about means of death, personal details, or post photos. Be careful in creating virtual memorials or tributes elevating the victim to the level of celebrity and increasing contagion risk. 19

References 1. Bearman PS, Moody J, Suicide and Friendships among American adolescents. Am Jrl Public Health 2004; 94(1): 89-95 2. Biddle, L., Donovan, J. E., Hawton, K., Kapur, N., & Gunnell, D. (2008). Suicide and the Internet. British Medical Journal, 336, 800-802. 3. Borowsky IW, Ireland M, Resnick MD. Adolescent suicide attempts: risk and protective factors. Pediatrics 2001; 107(3): 485-493. 4. Brown GK, Henriques GR, Have TT, Xie SX, Hollander JE, Beck AT. 2005. Cognitive Therapy for the prevention of suicide attempts: a randomized controlled trial. AMA. 5. Cohen S. Social relationships and health. Am Psychol 2004: 59 (8): 676-684. 6. CDC. Connectedness as a strategic direction for the prevention of suicidal behavior. 2006. 7. Evans E, Hawton K, & Rodham K. (2004). Factors associated with suicidal phenomena in adolescents: Systematic review of population-based studies. Clin Psychol Rev, 24:957-979. 8. Ellison NB, Steinfield C, & Lampe C. (2007). The benefits of Facebook "friends": Social capital and college students' use of online social network sites. Jnl of Computer-Mediated Comm, 12(4), 1143-1168. 9. Sheldon, P. (2008). The relationship between unwillingness-to-communicate and students' Facebook use. Journal of Media Psychology, 20(2), 67-75. 10. Feigelman W, Gorman BS. Assessing the effects of peer suicide on youth suicide. Suicide Life Threat Behav 2008; 38 (2) 181-194. 11. Goldsmith,SK; Pellmar, TC; Kleinman, AM; & Bunney, WE eds. Institute of Medicine. (2002). Reducing suicide: A national imperative. Washington, DC: National Academies Press. 12. Gould, M., Jamieson, P., & Romer, D. (2003). Media contagion and suicide among the young. American Behavioral Scientist, 46(9), 1269-1284. 13. Insel BJ, Gould MS. Impact of modeling of adolescent suicidal behavior. Psychiatr Clin N Am 2008: 31(2):293-316. 14. March J, Silva S, Petrycki S, Curry J, Wells, Fairbank J, et al. (2004) Fluoxitene, cognitive behavioral therapy and their combination for adolescents with depression: treatment for adolescents with depression (TADS) randomized control trial. JAMA. 15. National Annenberg Survey of Youth. June 10, 2011. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry Vol 52, issue 10 (http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1469-7610.2011.02416.x/pdf). 16. O Carroll, PW and Potter, LB. (1994). Suicide contagion and the reporting of suicide: Recommendations from a national workshop. Morbidity and Mortality Weekly 43, RR-6. 17. Hockey, K. (2003). Raising depression-free children: A parent s guide to prevention and early intervention. Center City, Minn: Hazeldon. 18. Seligman, M. (1995). The optimistic child: A proven program to safeguard children against depression and build lifelong resilience. Boston: Houghton Mifflen. 19. Social networking and engaging youth in suicide prevention.wellaware.org [webinar: 3/23/11] 20. Gillham JE & Reivich KJ. (1999). Prevention of depression in schoolchildren. Psychol Sci 10: 461-462. 21. Jamison, KR. (1999). Night falls fast: Understanding suicide. NY: AA Knopf. 22. American Psychiatric Association. (2013). Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders. Wash, DC 23. Fleming, T. et al. Australian and New Zealand Jrl of Psychiatry 2007; 41: 213-221 24. Castro J. (2008).Depression in children and adolescents. Univ of Arkansas Psychiatric Research Institute. 25. National Research Council, 2004. Firearms and violence: What do we know? National Academies Press, Wash DC 26. Barber, C. July/Aug 2005. Fatal Connection: The link between guns and suicide. Advancing Suicide Prevention.com 27. Seligman, M (2012) Flourish: A visionary new understanding of happiness and well-being. Atria Books.