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kids: suicide

NEW! Kids' Suicides Rise, CDC Report Finds. Click here to read USA Today article.



Suicide
is the third leading cause of death for 15 - 24 year olds (approx 5,000 young people) and the sixth leading cause of death for five - 15 year olds. (American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry)

The rate of suicide for this age group has nearly tripled since 1960, making it the third leading cause of death in adolescents and the second leading cause of death among college age youth. (American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry)

More teenagers and young adults died as a result of suicide in 1999 than cancer, heart disease, HIV/AIDS, birth defects, stroke and chronic lung disease combined. (U.S. Centers for Disease Control & Prevention)

For every older teen and young adult who takes his or her own life, 100-200 of their peers attempts suicide. Between 500,000 and
1 million young people attempt suicide each year. (American Association of Suicidology)


Recognizing The Warning Signs

Four out of five teens who attempt suicide have given clear warnings. Pay attention to these warning signs:

Suicide threats, direct and indirect
Obsession with death
Poems, essays and drawings that refer to death
Dramatic change in personality or appearance
Irrational, bizarre behavior
Overwhelming sense of guilt, shame or reflection
Changed eating or sleeping patterns
Severe drop in school performance
Giving away belongings

Helping Suicidal Teens

Offer help and listen. Encourage depressed teens
to talk about their feelings. Listen, don't lecture.

Trust your instincts. If it seems that the situation
may be serious, seek prompt help. Break a confidence
if necessary, in order to save a life.

Pay attention to talk about suicide. Ask direct
questions and don’t be afraid of frank discussions.
Silence is deadly!

Seek professional help. It is essential to seek
expert advice from a mental health professional who
has experience helping depressed teens. Also, alert key adults in the teen’s life — family, friends and teacher.

"We must hasten the day when no child or adolescent need be too hard to handle, too sad to survive, too strange and angry to live among us, too ill to laugh, play and love."

National Advisory Mental Health Council, 1999