Suicide rates are rising among young girls, study finds
“It’s not just numbers. We’re seeing a trend. But we don’t have good information about what is driving this shift.”
By Erika Edwards
For years, more boys than girls have taken their own lives — but that divide is narrowing.
And it’s not because fewer boys are dying by suicide. It’s because the number of girls doing so is rising, according to research released Friday by Nationwide Children’s Hospital in Columbus, Ohio.
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Suicide is still a leading cause of death among teenagers, but the researchers found a disproportionate increase in the number of suicides by younger girls from the ages of 10 to 14.
“We
can’t think it’s just a male problem,” said study author Donna Ruch, a
researcher at Nationwide Children’s Center for Suicide Prevention and
Research.
Ruch and her colleagues analyzed national data
on suicides from 1975 to 2016 among children and teens 10 to 19. Suicide
rates fell during the 1990s, but started to climb in 2007, according to
the study published Friday in JAMA Network Open. Rates increased among
both boys and girls, but more so for girls.
We can’t think it’s just a male problem.
“It’s
not just numbers. We’re seeing a trend,” Ruch told NBC News. “But we
don’t have good information about what is driving this shift.”
Outside
experts suggest part of the reason rates started increasing in 2007 was
because of better surveillance and reporting. The CDC’s National Violent Death Reporting System
began collecting information on violent deaths, including suicides,
from six states in 2002. Other states were gradually added, with data
collection rising to all 50 states just last year.
“We’re
also treating youth depression less aggressively than we were back in
the 1990s,” said Julie Cerel, a psychologist at the University of
Kentucky and former president of the American Association of
Suicidology.
In 2004, the FDA added a black box warning
to antidepressants, indicating the drugs are associated with an
increased risk for suicidal thoughts in young people. Cerel said that
deterred some parents and doctors from giving the medications to
teenagers.
Experts
agree more research is needed. “We’re all trying to figure out what
we’re missing and how to do a better job at keeping these kids alive,”
Cerel said.
“Is it bullying? Social media?
Specific entertainment shows? With suicide it’s never just one cause,”
Cerel added. “But at the same time, it’s hard to figure out how each of
those areas play into the pain teenagers are feeling.”
While
news of suicides can be upsetting for parents, child psychologists
stress that it’s crucial parents talk to their children about it, rather
than ignore the trend.
“Have
frank conversations about suicide and hopelessness and pain,” Cerel
said. “Be able to ask your kids and your kids’ friends: ‘Are you
hopeless? Are you thinking of killing yourself?’”
And
the earlier parents can open up the lines of communication with their
children, the better, according to Cerel. “Kids with thoughts of suicide
have said, ‘I first felt like this when I was in preschool,’” she said.
She recommends age-appropriate ways of talking with kids about expressing their feelings.
“Make
it a normal conversation very early on, kind of like talking to little
kids about stranger danger and inappropriate touching,” Cerel told NBC
News.
Ruch agrees. “We need to be able to have intelligent conversations about this with our kids,” she said.
“This could be happening at a much younger age than parents think.”
Some of the typical warning signs for suicidal thoughts and suicide are:
- a child or teenager who says they think about killing themselves
- a child or teenager who is unhappy for an unusually extended period of time
- a child or teenager who withdraws from friends, school or social activities
- a child or teenager who is increasingly irritable or aggressive
Parents can find additional resources through a children's mental health program at Nationwide Children's Hospital called On Our Sleeves.
This story discusses suicide. If you or someone you know is at risk of suicide, please contact the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 800-273-8255 or text HOME to 741741.
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