The Texas School Safety Center will conduct 14 Texas Tobacco-Free Teen Leadership Summits during the Spring of 2012 to train and equip community and school-based organizations to invest in youth. At these summits young people and adult allies will come together to create positive social change concerning tobacco use and prevention. This more
A new series of studies analyzing drug-related hospital emergency department visits throughout the country during 2008 reveals a substantial percentage of these visits involve suicide attempts. According to these studies conducted by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) more than one in every twelve (8.8 percent) drug-related hospital emergency department visit by an adolescent is a suicide attempt – double the rate found among cases involving those age 25 and older (4.4 percent). Among cases involving young adults aged 18 to 25 the attempted suicide rate was 6.6 percent.
The vast majority of these suicide attempts by adolescents were made by females (72.3 percent). Females constituted a majority of cases among young adults and those over age 25 as well, but at significantly lower levels (57.6 percent and 57.7 percent, respectively).
Although pharmaceutical drugs were involved in more than 9 out of 10 of these drug-related suicide attempt cases, there were considerable differences in the patterns of substances used among various age and gender groups.
For example, acetaminophen products were the most commonly used substances involved in hospital emergency department visits by female adolescents attempting suicide (28.5 percent) while anti-anxiety drugs were the most commonly used substances in cases involving females age 25 or older (49.9 percent). Similarly, adolescent males admitted for drug-related suicides were more than three times as likely to have used antipsychotic drugs as their female counterparts (14.3 percent versus 4.3 percent).
The studies also reveal significant differences in the level of follow up care (e.g., inpatient admission, transfer to another hospital facility or referral to detoxification) given in these cases -- differences often associated with the type of substance used and the age of those attempting suicide.
For example, while over 90.2 percent of adolescents who visited hospital emergency departments for attempting suicide with antidepressants received follow up care, only 52.4 percent of adolescent cases involving ibuprofen received it. Similarly, 83.1 percent of the cases involving adolescents using alcohol received follow up care while only 59.4 percent of alcohol related cases among those age 25 or older received it.
In 2007 (the most recent year for which figures are available), suicides in the United States accounted for 34,598 deaths - almost twice the number of homicides (18,361). To help address this problem, SAMHSA sponsors the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline (Lifeline) 1-800-273-TALK (8255), a network of crisis call centers located throughout the nation that can immediately link a caller seeking help to a trained counselor closest to the caller’s location, 24 hours a day, seven days a week. Calls to the toll-free Lifeline are confidential.
Additional information about all these aspects of SAMHSA’s National Suicide Prevention Lifeline and the Veterans Suicide Prevention Hotline can be accessed at: http://www.suicidepreventionlifeline.org/. Additional information about other SAMHSA suicide prevention programs can be obtained by visiting SAMHSA’s Web site, http://www.samhsa.gov.
The series of studies, Emergency Department Visits for Drug-Related Suicide Attempts by Adolescents: 2008, Emergency Department Visits for Drug-Related Suicide Attempts by Young Adults Aged 18 to 24: 2008 and Emergency Department Visits for Drug-Related Suicide Attempts by Adults Aged 25 or Older: 2008 was developed as part of SAMHSA’s strategic initiative on data, outcomes, and quality – an effort to inform policy makers and service providers on the nature and scope of behavioral health issues. Their data came from the 2008 Drug Abuse Warning Network (DAWN) report. DAWN is a public health surveillance system that monitors drug-related hospital emergency department visits reported throughout the nation.
The studies are available on line at
http://www.oas.samhsa.gov/2k10/DAWN001/SuicideAttempts.cfm
http://www.oas.samhsa.gov/2k10/DAWN002/SuicideAttemptsYoungAdults.cfm
http://oas.samhsa.gov/2k10/AdultSuicide/AdultSuicide.cfm
Copies may also be obtained by calling SAMHSA’s Health Information Network at 1-877-SAMHSA-7 (1-877-726-4727). For related publications and information, visit http://www.samhsa.gov/ .
SAMHSA is a public health agency within the Department of Health and Human Services. Its mission is to reduce the impact of substance abuse and mental illness on America’s communities.
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For additional information on this CTS Newsletter article, please contact:
Daniel LeFave
Source: SAMHSA
http://www.samhsa.gov/newsroom/advisories/1007133243.aspx
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