Researchers examined insurance-claim data on more than 32,000
patients ranging from 12 to 24 years old who were followed for one
year after a nonfatal self-harm episode. Unlike suicide attempts,
which require suicidal intent, episodes of self-harm can also
include poisoning, cutting, firearms or other violent methods used
to cause nonfatal injuries.
Poisoning was by far the most common method of self-harm, accounting
for 65 percent of cases, followed by cutting at 18 percent, the
study found. Guns were used in slightly less than 1 percent of
cases.
When youth did use guns to harm themselves, however, they were more
than 35 times more likely to kill themselves over the next year
compared with teens and young adults whose acts of self-harm
involved other methods, the study found.
“How young people injured themselves was a strong predictor of
future suicide risk,” said lead study author Dr. Mark Olfson, a
psychiatry researcher at Columbia University in New York City.
“More violent methods such as firearms or hanging carried much
greater risk than less violent methods such as cutting or
poisoning,” Olfson said by email.
Nonfatal self-harm is common among young people, and suicide is the
second leading cause of death among Americans aged 15 to 24,
researchers note in Pediatrics. Nearly one-third of young people who
die of suicide have nonfatal self-harm events in their final three
months of life.
In the current study, many of the teens and young adults had been
recently diagnosed with substance abuse problems or mental health
issues like depression or anxiety. Almost half of them had recently
received outpatient mental health care.
Youth with personality disorders were 55 percent more likely to have
repeat self-harm episodes, and the risk increased by 65 percent if
they received inpatient care.
But roughly one in four youth in the study had no diagnosis of
mental health or substance abuse problems before they harmed
themselves.
The analysis wasn’t a controlled experiment designed to prove
whether or how the method of self-harm might impact the potential
for young people to kill themselves. Another limitation is that the
insurance claims records didn’t identify patients with suicidal
intent.
A separate study in Pediatrics highlighted another, independent risk
factor for suicide in teens: homelessness.
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Researchers examined survey data on more than 62,000 teens enrolled
in school in Minnesota, including about 4,600 youth who were
homeless and living with an adult family member.
Homeless youth were more likely to be boys, non-white, poor and
living outside of urban areas.
Overall, about 29 percent of these homeless teens reported
self-injury, 21 percent reported suicidal thoughts and 9 percent
reported suicide attempts.
Compared to non-homeless youth, homeless teens were roughly twice as
likely to report self-injury and suicidal thoughts, and more than
three times as likely to attempt suicide.
This study also wasn’t a controlled experiment designed to prove
whether or how homelessness might influence self-harm or suicide
among teens.
Still, it offers fresh evidence of the severe emotional distress
experienced by homeless youth, said lead author Dr. Andrew Barnes of
the University of Minnesota Medical School in Minneapolis.
“Youth who have been homeless have often had a lot of negative,
highly stressful things happen in their lives as they’ve grown up,”
Barnes said by email.
“On top of that, they are more likely to be members of historically
oppressed racial or ethnic groups, and to have suffered from
discrimination, harassment, and social marginalization,” Barnes
added. “All of that takes a toll on healthy development - not only
their mental health, but their physical health and academic
achievement.”
Stability and support might make self-harm and suicide less likely
for these vulnerable teens, however.
“Building loving and positive relationships with parents, teachers
and their child’s school does reduce their teens’ risk of suicide,”
Barnes said. “So does promoting their teens’ sense of positive
self-identify, connection to their community and sense of purpose.”
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2ppd5Wm and http://bit.ly/2u2LgZz Pediatrics,
online March 20, 2018.
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