CDC: Suicide rate among US girls soars

Inkara1

Well-Known Member
The suicide rate among preteen and young teen girls spiked 76 percent, a disturbing sign that federal health officials say they can't fully explain.
For all young people between ages 10 to 24, the suicide rate rose 8 percent from 2003 to 2004 — the biggest single-year bump in 15 years — in what one official called "a dramatic and huge increase." The report, based on the latest numbers available, was released Thursday by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and suggests a troubling reversal in recent trends. Suicide rates had fallen by 28.5 percent since 1990 among young people.
The biggest increase — about 76 percent — was in the suicide rate for 10- to 14-year-old girls. There were 94 suicides in that age group in 2004, compared to 56 in 2003. The rate is still low — fewer than one per 100,000 population.
Suicide rates among older teen girls, those aged 15-19 shot up 32 percent; rates for males in that age group rose 9 percent.
"In surveillance speak, this is a dramatic and huge increase," Dr. Ileana Arias said of the overall picture. She is director of the CDC's National Center for Injury Prevention and Control.
More research is needed to determine whether this is a trend or just a blip, said one child psychiatrist, Dr. Thomas Cummins of Children's Memorial Hospital in Chicago. "We all need to keep our eye on this over time to see if this is a continuing trend."
Overall, there were 4,599 suicides among young people in 2004, making it the third-leading cause of death, surpassed only by car crashes and homicide, Arias said. Males committed suicide far more often than females, accounting for about three-quarters of suicides in this age group.
The study also documented a change in suicide method. In 1990, guns accounted for more than half of all suicides among young females. By 2004, though, death by hanging and suffocation became the most common suicide method. It accounted for about 71 percent of all suicides in girls aged 10-14; about half of those aged 15-19; and 34 percent between 20-24.
"While we can't say (hanging) is a trend yet, we are confident that's an unusually high number in 2004," said Dr. Keri Lubell, a CDC behavioral scientist who was one of the study authors.
Scientists speculated that hanging may have become the most accessible method.
"It is possible that hanging and suffocation is more easily available than other methods, especially for these other groups," Arias said.
The CDC is advising health officials to consider focusing suicide prevention programs on girls ages 10-19 and boys between 15-19 to reverse the trends. It also said the suicide methods suggest that prevention focused solely on restricting access to pills, weapons or other lethal means may be of limited success.
As for why rates are up, Richard Lieberman, who coordinates the suicide prevention program for Los Angeles public schools, said one cause could be a rise in depression during tumultuous adolescent years.
"There's a lot of pressure in and around middle school kids. They're kind of all transition kids. They're turbulent times to begin with," he said. "The hotline's been ringing off the hook with middle school kids experimenting with a wide variety of self-injurious behavior, exploring different ways to hurt themselves."
Arias said the declining use of antidepressants in those age groups might play a role. But it's "not the only factor" that health officials will be studying.
Four years ago, federal regulators warned that antidepressants seemed to raise the risk of suicidal behavior among young people, so black box warnings were put on the drugs' packaging.
When partial teen suicide data was published earlier this year, experts noted at the time that the drop in sales of the drugs corresponded with a rise in the suicide rate. Now there is concern that some children who need the medication aren't getting it.
"Suicide is a multidimensional and complex problem," Arias said. "As much as we'd like to attribute suicide to a single source so we can fix it, unfortunately we can't do that."
More education is needed, some specialists said, so that teachers, parents and others can quickly spot troubled teens.
"It underscores the need for more evaluation methods for school personnel and pediatricians to be able to better identify at-risk youth," said Dr. Alec Miller, director of the adolescent depression and suicide program at Montefiore Medical Center in New York. "They are out there, and everyone needs to be better trained in identification."
He said people who commit suicide tend to have a psychiatric condition, even if it has not been formally diagnosed.
Arias said warning signs include mental illness, alcohol and drug use, family dysfunction and relationship problems.
"For some, talking about suicide is awkward," she said. "Our goal is to stop suicides, and to do that we need everyone's willingness to talk about it.



source
 

BlurOfSerenity

New Member
what's disconcerting to me is that many people who do actually commit suicide don't give any verbal signs, like, "oh, i'm going to kill myself"... so often it seems to come completely out of the blue.
i imagine it's harder to do something about when you don't even know!
it's shocking to me that girls so young are killing themselves. i was extremely suicidal when i was 12-13, but when i look back, i'm glad i stuck around because life has gotten much better than i ever thought it could be. its sad that so many don't feel that they have any hope to hold on to... and that the numbers are rising.
 

SouthernN'Proud

Southern Discomfort
I think it's because they are expected to endure teenaged boys. Boys walking around with their britches hanging about the kneecaps, a ball cap on sideways, and a little bumblebee car they have fooled themselves into considering a hot rod. Boys who can't shave the peach fuzz off without bleeding to death from cutting the tips of all them zits off because they're too lazy to wash themselves so they have acne from Hell. Boys who consistently refer to them as bitches, hos, and skanks, while they fashion themselves as playahz, pimps, and mack daddies or whatever. Hell, I'd start considering it after a few years myself.
 

2minkey

bootlicker
I think it's because they are expected to endure teenaged boys. Boys walking around with their britches hanging about the kneecaps, a ball cap on sideways, and a little bumblebee car they have fooled themselves into considering a hot rod. Boys who can't shave the peach fuzz off without bleeding to death from cutting the tips of all them zits off because they're too lazy to wash themselves so they have acne from Hell. Boys who consistently refer to them as bitches, hos, and skanks, while they fashion themselves as playahz, pimps, and mack daddies or whatever. Hell, I'd start considering it after a few years myself.

:bgpimp:
 

Gato_Solo

Out-freaking-standing OTC member
This will piss more than a few people off, but this is also a result of divorce...ie a single-parent household. I'll put this in the file called "Daddy Issues".
 

BlurOfSerenity

New Member
it's also weird that hanging/suffocation and guns are so common for girls. i had a friend that shot herself, and my therapist as well as some others told me that that was unusual because girls like to still look pretty after death.
they like others to still look pretty too. that's why it's common for women to poison people they want to kill... but less common for men to.
 

spike

New Member
it's also weird that hanging/suffocation and guns are so common for girls.

It's because they watch too many Westerns.

Makes as much sense as any of the other reasons people are reaching for in this thread.
 

Error

Banned
"For some, talking about suicide is awkward," she said. "Our goal is to stop suicides, and to do that we need everyone's willingness to talk about it.

lolol. I'd recently contemplated suicide constantly... for about the last two-three years.. and I've told many-a people... talking about it does exactly the opposite. People you talk about it to just tell you grow up and criticize you and don't believe you and just blow you off.. for me that made the desire more intense.

And about the single parent comment, I grew up sans a father.. didn't make me suicidal... made me wish HE would die though.

one more thing... just out of curiosity.. how does one suffocate themselves? Seems like that'd be like just refusing to breathe (which I have tried before btw lol..) you just can't... your body FORCES you not to die!*handonhip
 

Inkara1

Well-Known Member
Self-strangulation, perhaps with a belt... plastic bag over the head, maybe... the old "let the car idle in the garage for a few hours" trick...
 

Inkara1

Well-Known Member
Yep... nothing like feeling down enough to try suicide, then failing and feeling down because of that, then getting charged with attempted suicide.
 

Gato_Solo

Out-freaking-standing OTC member
Daddy issues can lead to a whole buttload of problems... not necessarily suicidal thoughts.

Ahem...

Error said:
lolol. I'd recently contemplated suicide constantly... for about the last two-three years.. and I've told many-a people... talking about it does exactly the opposite. People you talk about it to just tell you grow up and criticize you and don't believe you and just blow you off.. for me that made the desire more intense.
 

Error

Banned

All of my contemplating suicide came from love issues and family issues (family, as in the one I live with, my father's long gone). I'd never give my piece of shit father the fucking ability to get to me that much... the only emotion HE causes in me is complete hatred and I just wish he'd die.
 
Top