Violence Exposure and Firearms Linked to Teen Suicide Risks

Summary: A study of U.S. high school students reveals a strong link between suicidal behavior, externalizing behaviors (such as physical violence), and exposure to violence. Adolescents with a history of weapon carrying or engaging in violent acts were found to have a higher risk of injurious suicide attempts, particularly when firearms are accessible.

State-level data highlighted the complexity of firearm access and its correlation with suicide, showing variations in trends by state and demographic factors. These findings underscore the urgent need for targeted interventions addressing firearm safety and violence prevention to reduce adolescent suicide rates.

Key Facts:

  • Suicidal behavior correlates with externalizing behaviors like violence and weapon use.
  • Firearm accessibility is a key factor driving state-level suicide rate differences.
  • Adolescents engaging in violence are at higher risk of injurious self-harm.

Source: Elsevier

Suicide remains a leading cause of death among adolescents. A new study among US high school students has found that suicidal behavior is significantly associated with externalizing behaviors and violence exposure.

The new study, appearing in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine, published by Elsevier, is the first to assess this association at the state level.

This shows a teen at a cross roads.
Externalizing behaviors are characterized by aggressive and disruptive behaviors that can be harmful to others or the social environment. Credit: Neuroscience News

Although access to firearms and other weapon use contribute to suicide risk, the underlying risk for, and correlates of, firearm use among US adolescents is understudied.

A cross-sectional study using data from 1991 to 2021 on 234,588 adolescents from the Youth Risk Behavior Survey examined the associations between externalizing behaviors, violence exposure, firearm carrying, and suicidal behavior to provide an assessment of the ways in which broader violence risk factors may increase the risk for injurious self-harm.

Externalizing behaviors are characterized by aggressive and disruptive behaviors that can be harmful to others or the social environment. Examples of externalizing behaviors and violence expression are threatening others with a weapon, starting a physical fight, and committing sexual violence.

First author Victoria A. Joseph, MPH, Department of Epidemiology, Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health, says, “We found significant associations between suicidal behavior and externalizing behaviors and violence exposure, with higher magnitudes of associations among those with a suicide attempt requiring medical treatment.

“The association between externalizing behaviors and violence exposure and injurious suicide attempt also varied over time and by sex.”

Firearm-based suicide rates have increased among adolescents in recent years, suggesting a growing urgency to examine dynamics surrounding firearms and their role pertaining to suicidal behavior. Access to firearms and suicide rates in the US vary by state.

Ms. Joseph explains, “Suicide deaths are more prevalent among individuals who live in rural areas due in part to firearm access, isolation, and limited access to mental health services. State-level variations of suicide rates are heavily driven by suicide deaths involving firearms.”

The study’s researchers evaluated trends from data available from 16 states (ID, IL, IA, LA, MI, MS, MT, NE, NH, NM, NY, OK, PA, UT, VA, and WV) on carrying a gun or other weapon. They found that among adolescents with an injurious suicide attempt in 2021, state-level differences in weapon access emerged.

Ms. Joseph notes, “Although the prevalence of suicide involving firearms is higher in the West, surprising trends emerged such as low prevalence of weapon access among those with an injurious suicide attempt in gun ownership states such as Montana and high prevalence in states with low gun ownership such as New York. It should be noted that sparse data at the state level hindered the assessment of trends over time in every state.

“Due to variations in suicide rates, gun laws and weapon access in the US, state-level assessments of suicide risk and interventions are essential.

Lead investigator of the study Katherine M. Keyes, MPH, PhD, Department of Epidemiology, Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health, concludes, “Firearm injury is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality among young people in the United States, including through suicidal behavior.

“Youth who carry weapons and have higher risks of engaging in physical violence also have a higher risk of self-inflicted violence, underscoring the need for stronger firearm protections to protect youth health.”

About this mental health and suicide research news

Author: Eileen Leahy
Source: Elsevier
Contact: Eileen Leahy – Elsevier
Image: The image is credited to Neuroscience News

Original Research: Open access.
Externalizing Behaviors/Violence Exposure and Suicide Among US Adolescents” by Victoria A. Joseph et al. American Journal of Preventative Medicine


Abstract

Externalizing Behaviors/Violence Exposure and Suicide Among US Adolescents

Introduction

This study examines associations between externalizing behaviors/violence exposure and suicidal behavior among U.S. high school students from 1991 to 2021.

Methods

Data for this cross-sectional study were drawn from the Youth Risk Behavior Survey and the total sample contained data on 234,588 adolescents. Logistic regression models were used to assess the relationship between externalizing behaviors/violence exposure and suicidal behavior. To assess trends over time, models were then assessed for multiplicative interactions between externalizing behaviors/violence exposure and time by sex. State-level trends were also assessed. All analyses were conducted in 2024.

Results

The prevalence of externalizing behaviors/violence exposure increased among youth with an injurious suicide attempt (ISA). Logistic regression models indicated statistically significant associations across suicidal behaviors with a higher magnitude of association observed among those with an ISA. For instance, compared to those who did not carry a gun, those who carried a gun had 6.32 (95% confidence interval: 4.78, 8.36) times the odds of ISA versus no attempt and 2.66 (95% confidence interval: 2.00, 3.53) times the odds of non-ISA versus no attempt. Stronger associations arose among male individuals. Among those with an ISA in 2021, state-level differences in weapon access emerged.

Conclusions

Adolescents with externalizing behaviors/violence exposure are at an increased risk of an ISA. The relationship varies over time and by sex. Culturally adaptive and structurally competent approaches to mental health and mechanisms to identify at-risk youth are imperative.

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