The study assessed the association between exposure to suicide and suicidal thoughts and suicide attempts among young people based on a cross-sectional and prospective two year follow-up study done between 1998 and 2007. The study examined the responses from 8766 children aged 12 - 17 years.
1. The respondents were asked whether anyone in their school had died by suicide (schoolmate's suicide) and they were also asked if they personally knew someone who died by suicide (personally known suicide)?
The study assessed whether personally knowing a peer decedent increased the risk of suicidality outcomes relative to a lesser-known peer decedent.
The study found that aged 16-17, 24.1% of the respondents reported a schoolmate's suicide and 20.1% reported personally knowing someone who died by suicide.
(a) Risk of suicidal ideation and attempted suicide if the person was exposed to a suicide.
Ages 12-13: 15.3% of those exposed to suicide in the past year had suicidal ideation and 7.5% had attempted suicide, while 3.4% of those unexposed to suicide had suicidal ideation and 1.7% attempted it.
Ages 14-15: 14.2% of those exposed to suicide in the past year had suicidal ideation and 8.6% had attempted suicide, while 5.3% of those unexposed to suicide had suicidal ideation and 2.3% attempted it.
Ages 16-17: 15.1% of those exposed to suicide in the past year had suicidal ideation and 8.1% had attempted suicide, while 7.4% of those unexposed to suicide had suicidal ideation and 2.7% attempted it
Ages 12-13: 13.7% had suicidal ideation and 5.6 % had attempted suicide, if they personally knew a person who died by suicide, while 4.6% had suicidal ideation and 2.3% had attempted suicide if they did not personally know a person who died by suicide.
Ages 14-15: 18.4% had suicidal ideation and 12.5% had attempted suicide, if they personally knew a person who died by suicide, while 7.6% had suicidal ideation and 3.6% had attempted suicide if they did not personally know a person who died by suicide.
Ages 16-17: 14% had suicidal ideation and 8.4% had attempted suicide, if they personally knew a person who died by suicide, while 8.1% had suicidal ideation and 3.2% had attempted suicide if they did not personally know a person who died by suicide.
The study stated:
"We found that exposure to suicide predicts suicidality. This is true for all age groups, although exposure to suicide increased the risk most dramatically in the youngest age group, when the baseline suicidality was relatively low. ... Exposure was consistently associated with attempts and to a lesser degree ideation; some of these associations were still significant 2 years later."
Since the study found that personally knowing a schoolmate who died by suicide was only of marginal greater risk for suicidal ideation or attempted suicide as compared to exposure to suicide alone therefore the study emphasized the importance of suicide prevention strategies being implemented within a whole school rather than focus on the friends of the person who died by suicide.
The Globe and Mail newspaper quoted study author Ian Coleman as saying:
"2009 Statistics Canada figures show 227 Canadians aged 10 to 19 died by their own hands, with 202 of those cases were among 15 to 19-years-olds. But as the second leading cause of death after accidental injury among Canadian youth, it's an issue that needs to be taken seriously."
Exposure to suicide within the last 2 years was associated with suicidal thoughts and suicide attempts among Canadian youths. This finding is based on responses from 8766 children aged 12–17 years in a national survey carried out between 1998 and 2007. The findings support school-wide or community-wide interventions over targeted strategies following a suicide, say the authors.
This study did not examine the effect of access to suicide devices or weapons related to suicide attempts.
This study also did not examine the effect of suicide exposure related to how the media reports a suicide death. Considering the fact that exposure to a suicide death when the person is a similar age and part of the same community is related to a significant increased risk for suicidal ideation and suicide attempts it is likely that how the media reports suicide deaths also increases the risk for suicidal ideation and suicide attempts especially when the person who dies by suicide is a similar age.
The EPC urges researchers to do a study on the relationship between suicide, assisted suicide and the promotion or normalizing of assisted suicide upon the rate of suicide.