Posts Tagged ‘teens’

UK Teen Suicide Rates on the Decline

Monday, April 26th, 2010

Suicide rates in those aged 10-19 in the UK declined by 28% in the seven year period from 1997-2003, shows a study published today in The Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry. The study, carried out by researchers at the University of Manchester, showed that the decline was particularly marked in young males, where rates declined by 35%.

Despite the decline, however, suicide remains more common among young males than young females. For every one adolescent female (aged 15-19 years) who commits suicide in the UK, there are three adolescent males, the study revealed.

The research, which was carried out as part of the National Confidential Inquiry into Suicide and Homicide by People with Mental Illness, showed that there were 1,722 adolescent and juvenile deaths by suicide in the UK between 1997 and 2003, which represents 4% of all suicides in that time period. The majority of young people were aged 15-19 (93% of the sample), and overall, the most common methods of suicide were hanging, followed by self-poisoning.

“Between 1997 and 2003, we found that suicide rates fell significantly, although we can only speculate on what factors may have contributed to the decline,” said Dr Kirsten Windfuhr, from the Centre for Suicide Prevention at the University of Manchester. “Although changes to antidepressant prescribing may have been one factor contributing to changing suicide rates, it is likely that a combination of factors, both clinical and socio-economic, will have contributed to the decrease in suicide rates. Suicide is a rare event, and is, thankfully, rarer still among children and adolescents. However, it is still one of the leading causes of death among young people and continued monitoring of recent suicide trends is important.”

Over the seven year period, only 14% of young people who committed suicide were in contact with mental health services in the year prior to their death, compared to 26% in adults. Again, there was a marked difference between males and females, with 20% of young females in contact with mental health services compared to only 12% of young males.

“The low rate of service contact in young males is particularly interesting. Young men currently have the highest rates of suicide in the UK, and yet they are least likely to seek help,” said Windfuhr. “Further research is needed to identify the specific risk factors associated with young suicide, and a multi-agency approach including health, social and education services may be the most effective strategy for preventing suicide in young people. In particular, research should be focused on the barriers which prevent young males from seeking help.”

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Newer Antidepressants Led To Less Teen Suicides

Friday, March 19th, 2010

A new study by researchers at the University of South Florida and University of Illinois suggests FDA mandated warnings about suicide in teens treated with antidepressants could have the unintended consequence of placing more youth at risk.

When a possible connection was suggested between teens who take antidepressant medications and a higher suicide rate, Hendricks Brown, professor and director of the Prevention Science and Methodology Group, USF College of Public Health, decided to investigate along with his colleague Robert Gibbons from the University of Illinois at Chicago.

Their study appears in the September 2007 issue of the American Journal of Psychiatry, titled “Early Evidence on the Effects of Regulated Suicidality Warnings on SSRI Prescriptions and Suicide in Children and Adolescents.” The researchers report findings contrary to earlier studies suggesting a link between antidepressants and suicidal thinking and behavior in youth.

“The overall effect of these newer antidepressants is very likely that they reduce suicide risk considerably,” Brown said. “Overall, the new antidepressants provide a large protective benefit. If there is any group of people who are adversely affected by taking these antidepressants, it has to be a very small group.”

The findings are compelling, especially in view of the FDA’s requirement in May for major black-box warnings to be placed on antidepressants for youth and young adults that advise of a potential suicide risk. The warnings, in turn, have led to a marked reduction in antidepressant use in adolescents and adults.

Suicide is the third leading cause of death in adolescents in this country, following only unintentional injuries and homicide. In real numbers, about 30,000 young people take their own lives in America each year.

These overwhelming figures, in addition to his own experiences with families who had lost loved ones to suicide, motivated Brown to devote enormous efforts to the study of teenage suicide prevention.

“People need to know if the antidepressant medication they are taking is increasing or decreasing their risk for suicide,” Brown said. “It would be bad if antidepressants were causing an increase in suicides, in which case the appropriate policy would be to restrict their use in adolescents. It would be even worse if FDA policies led to less treatment of depression and more suicides.”

Brown and his group examined different statistical approaches that might assess whether a widely used class of antidepressants known as selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (i.e., Prozac, Zoloft, Paxil, Celexa) were causing more or less suicides in the teenage population.

The analysis was problematic because suicide occurs in one person out of 10,000 youth, but there were only a few thousand youth enrolled in all the clinical trials of antidepressants. And in none of these trials was there a suicide, either among those given an antidepressant, or those given an inactive placebo. There was no ability to compare rates because the number of subjects in the clinical trials was too small.

Given those limitations, Brown used several data sources where depressed individuals were treated differently with different classes of antidepressants or no medication, and he examined the rates of suicide along with the rates of antidepressant prescriptions at the county level. He also looked at the reports of suicide detailed by U.S. doctors after medication use.

Brown found that suicide attempts were dramatically lowered once antidepressant medication began, indicating an overall benefit of these newer medications. Also, very few people who died from suicide had been taking antidepressants.

He also found consistent reductions in suicide across counties as well as across countries during the time when there was increased use of antidepressants. Now that the overall level of antidepressants have decreased since the FDA warnings, there is very early evidence of an upturn in youth suicides.

“With the FDA warnings there has been a rapid lowering of antidepressant prescriptions, and there has been a corresponding increase in youth suicides” noted Brown. “We found similar results in the Netherlands once the warning was broadcast there as well.”

Brown said sometimes health policy decisions are made on limited information, and it may be that the FDA warnings about suicide in youth treated with antidepressants could have unintended consequences of placing more youth at risk. The FDA is now reviewing policy decisions in the light of these data and at some point may withdraw or revise its warning.

Brown’s other work involves some of the first rigorous evaluations of additional therapies and corresponding successes of teenage suicide prevention, including community-based prevention plans. One such program, Sources of Strength, was developed in North Dakota and appears to be very helpful for rural, under-served communities and Native-American communities.

“There are valuable treatments available and ways that people can cope and thrive with adversity, rather than just survive in this world,” Brown said. “There are ways for people who have suicidal thoughts and attempts to get help.”

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U.S. Task Force Urges Docs to Screen for Depression in Teens

Wednesday, December 30th, 2009

Primary care doctors should routinely screen adolescents, ages 12 to 18, for major depression, says the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force. The benefits of screening outweigh any risks if doctors can assure accurate diagnosis, treatment and follow-up, according to the task force.

That’s a change from 2002, when the task force concluded there wasn’t sufficient evidence to recommend or oppose screening for adolescents. The task force said there’s still not enough evidence to make a recommendation about depression screening for children ages 7 to 11, USA Today reported.

In an article in the journal Pediatrics, the task force noted that questionnaires can accurately identify depression in adolescents, and that there’s new evidence that therapy and/or some antidepressants can help depressed teens. They emphasized the need for careful monitoring, because it’s been shown that antidepressants can increase suicidal behavior in teens.

About 1 in 20 teens suffers depression, which is associated with lower grades, more physical illness, increased drug use, and early pregnancy, USA Today reported.

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Government Pushing Mental Health Screening of All U.S. Teens

Monday, April 13th, 2009

In the April Issue of Pediatrics, the government’s U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) is urging doctors to routinely screen all American teens for depression using methods that the task force had previously condemned in their 2004 and 2006 reports, which found no evidence that screening for suicide risk reduces suicide attempts or death. The Citizens Commission on Human Rights International (CCHR), a non-profit group dedicated to protecting human rights in the field of mental health, has produced a short video to inform the public on the true nature of mental health screening and how it will assuredly lead to more kids being put on psychotropic drugs.

Since all mental health screening questionnaires are based on opinion only, asking teens such questions as “Has there been a time when you had less energy than you usually do?” or “Has there been a time when doing even little things made you feel really tired?” or “Has there been a time when you couldn’t think as clearly or as fast as usual?” can only give a short glimpse of a teenager’s feelings that day, typically filled with teenage angst and raging hormones.

Subjecting all teens to mental health screening questionaires that can’t determine who will become suicidal opens the door to widespread misdiagnosis and exposes teens to drugs that a study published in the January 2007 issue of Public Library of Science Medicine magazine showed were no more effective than placebo. SSRI antidepressants also carry the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s strongest “black box” warning that alerts consumers to an increased risk of suicide, especially for teens and young adults.

Disregarding the alarming evidence of the inefficacy and dangers of antidepressants, more prescriptions for the drug were written than for any other class of drugs in the U.S. in 2007, according to the March 12, 2008 IMS Health report, “IMS Health Reports U.S. Prescription Sales Grew 3.8 Percent in 2007, to $286.5 Billion.” Specifically for adolescents, a September 25, 2008 report, “A three-country comparison of psychotropic medication prevalence in youth,” published in Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and Mental Health showed that U.S. youth were prescribed antidepressants at a rate about three times greater than youths in Western Europe.

Despite this alarmingly high antidepressant prescription rate, the USPSTF recommends mental health screening and treatment including antidepressants; using screening methods that the USPSTF previously stated couldn’t prevent suicides. According to the article, “Suicide-Risk for Teens Debated,” in the June 16, 2006 issue of the Washington Post, USPSTF Chairman, Ned Calonge, stated “There is weak evidence that screening can distinguish people who will commit suicide from those who will not…. Such interventions have consequences beyond side effects from drugs or other treatments.”

Implementing the USPSTF’s recommendations will mean subjecting U.S. teens to illegitimate screening questionnaires that can lead to misdiagnosis and exposing them to dangerous psychiatric treatments. CCHR urges the public to enlighten themselves about mental health screening by watching this 4-minute video.

This is a public service announcement provided by the Citizens Commission on Human Rights International (CCHR®). CCHR was established in 1969 by the Church of Scientology to investigate and expose psychiatric violations of human rights.

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Depression and Problems of Graduate Students

Tuesday, March 24th, 2009

The Chronicle of Higher Education suggests that anyone in graduate school will tell you that for the most part, it’s not a happy time.

In research from the University of California at Berkeley from 2004, 67% of graduate students said they felt hopeless at least once in the past year; 54% were so depressed that they couldn’t function and 10% considered suicide.

Some are turned off by the Socratic or adversarial methods common in grad schools; and success in the job market isn’t guaranteed especially in today’s economy. Students often juggle many roles—spouse, parent, caregiver to a parent with financial responsibilities as well.

James Alan Fox, a law professor at Northeastern University, believes that graduate schools reward students who go overboard on work. On a website based at Wayne State University, devoted to grad students, 30% reported being on antidepressants.

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