Exposure to suicide and suicidal behaviors among Hong Kong adolescents.

Suicidal behaviors (deliberate self-injury with the intent to hurt or kill oneself) have been little examined outside the West. The aims of this study were to (a) determine the correlates of suicidal behaviors, and (b) examine whether depression and suicide ideation moderated the effects of exposure to completed and attempted suicide on suicidal behaviors among a community sample of Hong Kong youth ages 12-17. Adolescents responded to questions regarding self-injurious behaviors, and also indicated presence of intention to hurt or kill themselves in the past 12 months. Based on their responses, two groups of interest were formed: 96 youths reported both self-injurious behaviors and the intent to hurt or kill themselves, and formed the "suicidal behaviors" group; and, 1213 adolescents reported neither self-injurious behaviors nor intent to hurt self or die, and formed the control group. The participants also responded to questions about depressive symptoms, anxiety, suicidal ideation and attempt, alcohol/drug use, stressful life events, and family relationships. They indicated whether anyone they knew had attempted or completed suicide in the previous 12 months. Logistic regression indicated that depressive symptoms, stressful life events, suicidal ideation and exposure to suicide attempt (but not completed suicide) contributed unique variance to the presence of suicidal behaviors, after controlling for demographic variables. Depression (and at trend levels, suicidal ideation) moderated the effect of exposure to suicide attempt by others on suicidal behaviors. Our results indicate that completed suicide in the social network increases risk for suicidal behaviors, but not when other risk factors are controlled. By contrast, a suicide attempt independently increases risk for suicidal behaviors. Furthermore, those youths who experience depressive symptoms or suicidal ideation are at particularly high risk for engaging in suicidal behaviors when an exposure to suicide attempt occurs.

[1]  P. Lewinsohn,et al.  Psychosocial risk factors for future adolescent suicide attempts. , 1994, Journal of consulting and clinical psychology.

[2]  P. Bearman,et al.  Suicide and friendships among American adolescents. , 2004, American journal of public health.

[3]  D. Brent,et al.  Long-term impact of exposure to suicide: a three-year controlled follow-up. , 1996, Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry.

[4]  S. Greenwald,et al.  Psychosocial and risk behavior correlates of youth suicide attempts and suicidal ideation. , 2001, Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry.

[5]  Karen Rodham,et al.  Deliberate self harm in adolescents: self report survey in schools in England , 2002, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[6]  Laura Kann,et al.  Youth risk behavior surveillance--United States, 2003. , 2004, Morbidity and mortality weekly report. Surveillance summaries.

[7]  D. Stein,et al.  Physiological reactions to a suicide film: suicide attempters, suicide ideators, and nonsuicidal patients. , 1998, Suicide and Life-Threatening Behaviour.

[8]  P W O'Carroll,et al.  Beyond the Tower of Babel: a nomenclature for suicidology. , 1996, Suicide & life-threatening behavior.

[9]  S. Stewart,et al.  Suicidality among high school students in Hong Kong, SAR. , 2004, Suicide & life-threatening behavior.

[10]  R. Diekstra Suicidal behavior and depressive disorders in adolescents and young adults. , 1989, Neuropsychobiology.

[11]  K. Hawton,et al.  Deliberate self-harm in adolescents in Oxford, 1985-1995. , 2000, Journal of adolescence.

[12]  D. Brent,et al.  Psychiatric risk factors for adolescent suicide: a case-control study. , 1993, Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry.

[13]  J B Carlin,et al.  Adolescent suicidal behaviours: a population-based study of risk , 1997, Psychological Medicine.

[14]  L. Radloff The CES-D Scale , 1977 .

[15]  P. O'Carroll,et al.  Is suicide contagious? A study of the relation between exposure to the suicidal behavior of others and nearly lethal suicide attempts. , 2001, American journal of epidemiology.

[16]  S. Fekete,et al.  Suicidal Models—Their Frequency and Role in Suicide Attempters, Non-Suicidal Psychiatric Patients and Normal Control Cases: A Comparative German-Hungarian Study , 1996 .

[17]  K. Houston,et al.  Suicide in young people. Study of 174 cases, aged under 25 years, based on coroners' and medical records. , 1999, The British journal of psychiatry : the journal of mental science.

[18]  K. Hawton,et al.  Deliberate Self-Poisoning and Self-Injury in Children and Adolescents Under 16 Years of Age in Oxford, 1976–1993 , 1996, British Journal of Psychiatry.

[19]  S. Stewart,et al.  Suicide ideation and its relationship to depressed mood in a community sample of adolescents in Hong Kong. , 1999, Suicide & life-threatening behavior.

[20]  R. Harrington,et al.  Depression, suicide and deliberate self-harm in adolescence. , 2001, British medical bulletin.

[21]  T. McGlashan,et al.  Borderline personality disorder criteria associated with prospectively observed suicidal behavior. , 2004, The American journal of psychiatry.

[22]  P. French,et al.  A controlled trial of music and pre-operative anxiety in Chinese men undergoing transurethral resection of the prostate. , 2002, Journal of advanced nursing.

[23]  S. Stewart,et al.  Suicidality and cultural values among Hong Kong adolescents. , 2004, Social science & medicine.

[24]  C. Spielberger,et al.  Manual for the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory , 1970 .

[25]  P. Gutierrez,et al.  The relationship between exposure to adolescent suicide and subsequent suicide risk , 2003 .

[26]  M. Gould Suicide and the Media , 2001, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences.

[27]  P. Hazell,et al.  Friends of adolescent suicide attempters and completers. , 1993, Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry.