Community Connections, Winter 2002/2003
At
a Glance: Suicide Among the Young, The Surgeon General's Call To
ActionTo Prevent Suicide, 1999
Reprinted from www.surgeongeneral.gov
- For young people 15-24 years old, suicide is the third leading cause of death, behind
unintentional injury and homicide. In 1996, more teenagers and young adults
died of suicide than from cancer, heart disease, AIDS, birth defects,
stroke, pneumonia and influenza, and chronic lung disease combined.
-
Americans under the age of 25 accounted for 35% of the population, and
15% of all suicide deaths in 1996. The rate among children aged 10-14
was 1.6/100,000, the rate for children aged 15-19 was 9.7 per 100,000,
and the rate for young people aged 20-24 was 14.5/100,000.
- Important
risk factors for attempted suicide in youth are depression, alcohol or
other drug use disorder, and aggressive or disruptive behaviors.
-
Over the last several decades, the suicide rate in young people has increased
dramatically. From 1952-1996, the incidence of suicide among adolescents
and young adults nearly tripled, although there has been a general decline
in youth suicides since 1994. From 1980-1996, the rate of suicide among
persons aged 15-19 years increased by 14% and among persons aged 10-14
years by 100%. For African-American males aged 15-19, the rate increased
105%.
- Among persons aged 15-19 years, firearm-related suicides
accounted for 63% of the increase in the overall rate of suicide from
1980-1996.
- The risk for suicide among young people is greatest
among young white males; however, from 1980 through 1996, suicide rates
increased most rapidly among young black males.
- Males under the
age of 25 are much more likely to commit suicide than their female counterparts.
The 1996 gender ratio for people aged 15-19 was 5:1 (males to females),
while among those aged 20-24 it was 7:1.
- Although suicide among
young children is a rare event, the dramatic increase in the rate among
10-to-14-year-olds underscores the urgent need for intensifying efforts
to prevent suicide among persons in this age group.
- It has been widely reported that gay and lesbian youth are two to three times more
likely to commit suicide than other youth and that 30 percent of all attempted
or completed youth suicides are related to issues of sexual identity.
There are no empirical data on completed suicides to support such assertions,
but there is growing concern about an association between suicide risk
and bisexuality or homosexuality for youth, particularly males. Increased
attention has been focused on the need for empirically based and culturally
competent research on the topic of gay, lesbian and bisexual suicide.
- In a survey of students in 151 high schools around the country,
the 1997 Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance System found that Hispanic students
(10.7%) were significantly more likely than white students (6.3%) to have
reported a suicide attempt. Among Hispanic students, females (14.9%) were
more than twice as likely as males (7.2%) to have reported a suicide attempt.
But Hispanic male students (7.2%) were significantly more likely than
white male students (3.2%) to report this behavior.
posted
1/28/03
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