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Dating Violence, Sexual Assault Linked To Suicide In Urban Teens

According to a report in the June issue of Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, recent dating violence among urban teen females and lifetime history of sexual assault among urban teen males may be associated with suicide attempts. According to the article's background information, suicide is the third leading cause of death in adolescents. In 2003, 6.5 per 100,000 U.S. teenagers aged 14 to 19 years committed suicide.

The study analyzed data garnered from a self-administered, anonymous questionnaires completed by 8,080 students (age 14 and older) from 87 New York City public high schools in 2005 and showed a correlation between increased percentages pertaining to date violence, history of ongoing sexual assault and the presence of attempted suicide in the responders to the survey. The surveys measured different risk behaviors such as use of tobacco, alcohol and other drugs, unintentional injury and violence, sexual behaviors, dietary behaviors and physical activity. Students were also asked how many times they had attempted suicide, if they had experienced dating violence and if they had been sexually assaulted in the past 12 months. The statistics are as follows:

Females made up 51 percent of the students and those who responded were primarily not white (40.1 percent Hispanic, 36 percent black, 16 percent Asian/other and 7.9 percent white). "Persistent sadness (feeling sad or hopeless daily for two weeks in a row during the past year) occurred in 40.2 percent of female students and 24.2 percent of male students; also, 19.9 percent of females and 10.3 percent of males reported suicidal ideation [suicidal thoughts or behaviors] or seriously considering attempting suicide in the past year."

A lifetime history of sexual assault was reported by 9.6 percent of the females and 5.4 percent of the males in the study. In the past year, 10.6 percent of the girls and 9.5 percent of the boys reported that they had experienced dating violence and 11.7 percent of adolescent girls and 7.2 percent of adolescent boys reported that they had attempted suicide one or more times. For girls, violence in the past year was associated with suicide attempts, while lifetime history of sexual assault was not. Other significant factors influencing suicide attempts among females included sexual orientation, persistent sadness, disordered eating, feeling unsafe at school, being in a physical fight and binge drinking.

For male students, lifetime history of sexual assault was associated with suicide attempts, while dating violence in the past year was not. Other factors influencing suicide attempts among boys included sexual orientation, persistent sadness, disordered eating, drug use and gun possession

FULL TEXT:
Dating Violence, Sexual Assault, and Suicide Attempts Among Urban Teenagers

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This page contains a single entry from Psychology Briefs, the FindCounseling.com Blog, posted on June 14, 2007 11:08 AM.

The previous post was Sleep Sex: More Nightmare Than Dream Come True.

The next post is Cognitive Lock-In: Why Consumers Stick With The Familiar.

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