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as many as 25% go on to develop antisocial personality disorder and the criminal behavior, substance abuse, and high rate of suicide attempts that are symptomatic of it
In a survey of high school students, the National Youth Violence Prevention Resource Center found that almost 1 in 5 teens had thought about suicide, about 1 in 6 teens had made plans for suicide, and more than 1 in 12 teens had attempted suicide in the last year. As many as 8 out of 10 teens who commit suicide try to ask for help in some way before committing suicide, such as by seeing a doctor shortly before the suicide attempt.
Female
A lot
Suicide is a tremendously complicated subject. Suicide in teenagers more so. Those who successfully attempt suicide generally tend to be males in their twenties with a history of serious mental illness (usually, but not always, type 1 Bipolar Affective Disorder), a history of alcohol and drug abuse, a history of suicide in their families and access to deadly weapons. As you can see, the general trend is that teenagers are unlikely to successfully attempt suicide. The trend is complicated by the fact that unsuccessful attempts are most likely to be made by females in their teens. Which puts us right in the wheel house of your question. Female in their teens who attempt suicide have a particular set of increased risk factors. Suicide attempts are obviously co-morbid with mental health disorders (only the terminally ill, in most Western countries, choose to commit suicide for reasons not based on mental health). This group is generally too young to be Bipolar (the leading mental health risk group for suicide), as that disease typically has an on-set after age 19. Thus depression and personality disorders would be greater causes in this age group. In this group there is also a strong co-morbidity with eating disorders, particularly anorexia nervosa; eating disorders are overwhelming co-morbid with a history of sexual abuse. So the leading causes for attempted suicide in one's teens (and the attendant risk of a successful suicide) include; the patient is female; the patient is depressed or suffers from a personality disorder; the patient is anorexic; and the patient has a history of sexual abuse.
Cyberbullying
the five stages of personality development from birth to early teens is menstruation or menarche
How do teens odten feel that may make them more susceptible to suicide than adults
The leading cause of suicide is hard to determine with any accuracy, as there are many complicating factors. The mental health condition primarily associated with the highest suicide risk is type 1 Bipolar Affective Disorder, when the patient is in the depressive or mixed state phases. It is also regularly seen in Major Depressive Disorder and to a lesser extent Schizophrenia and some personality disorders. Increased risk factors for successful suicide attempts, in addition to the fact that the suicidal patient is mentally ill, are usually some combination of the following factors; the successful suicide is twice as likely to be male as female; the deceased had a history of suicide in their family; the deceased had alcohol and drug problems; the deceased had access to weapons; the deceased was in his or her twenties; the deceased was in a profession with a high risk of suicide; the deceased came from a culture with a tolerant view of suicide. Unsuccessful attempts tend to be made by females, (who are twice as likely to attempt suicide as males) and the attempts tend to occur while the patient is in their teens.
If you ever seen death, you've thought about suicide. The reason people commit suicide is because they over exudeate how bad there life is.
10,000
Well, of course, each teen in different, and in a different state of mind etc. Depending on what has drove them to suicide, depends on how they do it, but a magority of suicidal teens commit suicide when they are on their own, regardless of wheather they are in a public place or not.