A continued rise in
teen suicide rates is concerning mental health professionals, educators,
and youth workers. In the past 25 years, while the general incidence
of suicide has decreased, the rate for those between 15 and 24 has
tripled. It is generally considered to be the second or third most
common cause of death among adolescents, even though it is seriously
underreported. No one has advanced a good theory explaining why teens
are taking their own lives in greater numbers, but it's important
for everyone to be aware of the problem.
No talk of suicide should be taken lightly. It
indicates the need for professional help. Any suicidal gesture,
no matter how "harmless" it seems, demands immediate professional
attention.
Indicators of developing depression
in adolescents include:
Unhappiness
Gradual withdrawal into helplessness and apathy
Isolated behavior
Drop in school performance
Loss of interest in activities that formerly were sources of enjoyment
Feelings of worthlessness, hopelessness, helplessness
Fatigue or lack of energy or motivation
Change in sleep habits
Change in eating habits
Self-neglect
Preoccupation with sad thoughts or death
Loss of concentration
Increase in physical complaints
Sudden outbursts of temper
Reckless or dangerous behavior
Increased drug or alcohol abuse
Irritability; restlessness
More imminent danger signs
include:
Talking about death and wanting to die
Suicidal thoughts, plans, or fantasies
Previous suicide attempts
Friends who have attempted suicide
Giving away personal possessions
Telling a friend about suicidal plans
Writing a note
A recent article by Jane Brody
in the New York Times summarized research describing the
major risk factors of suicide among young people:
- Depression often not recognized. In younger children
and in adolescent boys, it often seems to be that the child is
simply angry or sullen. If this lasts more than a week or so with
no relief, and if there are other signs of depression changes
in appetite, activity level, sleep pattern; loss of interest in
activities that normally give pleasure; social withdrawal; thoughts
of death or punishment it should be taken seriously.
- Substance abuse. Sometimes teens try alcohol or other drugs
to relieve depression. Unfortunately the drugs themselves have
a depressant effect, and lower inhibitions against self-injurious
behavior. Some young people who have never expressed a suicidal
thought have taken their own lives when they got drunk to ease
the pain of a disappointment or loss. But they only felt worse
while drunk, and committed a rash, impulsive act which they wouldn't
have done sober.
- Behavioral problems getting in trouble in school or
with the law, fighting with parents are the third risk
factor for suicide. We tend to think of potential suicides as
sensitive, shy people who are overwhelmed by life. We don't see
the cocky, obnoxious adolescent as potentially self-destructive,
even though his behavior continually getting in trouble,
keeping the world at arm's length has exactly that effect.
I recently re-read The Catcher in the Rye and was amazed
to see Holden Caulfield, whom I had so identified myself with,
from my now-adult perspective. Though I still felt sympathetic,
I was struck by how depressed and self-destructive his behavior
seemed.
- Availability of a gun. This makes the consequences of an impulsive
act much more lethal. Surprisingly, even when a child has made
one attempt, parents often fail to remove guns from the home.
- Previous attempts. Half of all children who have made one suicide
attempt will make another, sometimes as many as two a year until
they succeed.
Other factors include a family
history of depression or substance abuse, and a recent traumatic
event. Some children who take their own lives are indeed the opposite
of the rebellious teen. They are anxious, insecure kids who have
a desperate desire to be liked, to fit in, to do well. Their expectations
are so high that they demand too much of themselves, so are condemned
to constant disappointment. A traumatic event, which can seem minor
viewed from an adult perspective, is enough to push them over the
edge into a severe depression. Being jilted, failing a test, getting
into an accident they have the sense that their life is a
delicate balance, and one failure or disappointment seems to threaten
the whole house of cards.
Depression can usually be treated
effectively and efficiently once it's recognized. Parents are bound
to have trouble understanding a depressed teen's confusing signals;
after all, who does not want to think of their child as happy and
confident. But parents must pay attention to serious depression;
the risks are too great if they don't.