Abstract

Adolescents’ exposure to a peer’s suicide has been found to be associated with, as well as to predict, suicidal ideation and behavior. Although postvention efforts tend to be school-based, little is known about the impact of a schoolmate’s suicide on the school’s student population overall. The present study seeks to determine whether there is excess psychological morbidity among students in a school where a schoolmate has died by suicide, and whether students’ attitudes about coping and help-seeking strategies are more or less problematic in such schools. Students in twelve high schools in Suffolk and Westchester counties in New York State—2865 students at six schools where a student had died by suicide within the past six months, and 2419 students at six schools where no suicide had occurred within the current students’ tenure—completed an assessment of their suicidal ideation and behavior, depressive symptoms, coping and help-seeking attitudes, stressful life events, and friendship with suicide decedent (if applicable). No excess morbidity (i.e., serious suicidal ideation/behavior and depression) was evident among the general student population after a schoolmate’s death by suicide; however, the risk of serious suicidal ideation/behavior was elevated among students at exposed schools who had concomitant negative life events. There was a significant relationship between friendship with the decedent and morbidity, in that students who were friends, but not close friends, of the decedents had the greatest odds of serious suicidal ideation/behavior. Overall, students in exposed schools had more adaptive attitudes toward help-seeking; but this was not true of the decedents’ friends or students with concomitant negative life events. The implications of the findings for postvention strategies are discussed.

Highlights

  • As suicide rates in the U.S continue to rise [1], so does the concomitant number of individuals exposed to a suicide

  • Our findings indicated that there was no excess of serious psychological morbidity, as reflected by rates of serious suicidal ideation/behavior and depression, among the general population of students attending schools where a schoolmate had died by suicide within the past six months

  • Friendship with the decedent was associated with psychological morbidity; it was not the closest friends of the decedents who were at increased risk of serious suicidal ideation/behavior; rather it was less close friends who had the highest rates of serious suicidal ideation/behavior

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Summary

Objectives

It is currently unknown whether attitudes about coping strategies and help-seeking are more or less problematic in a school where a schoolmate has died by suicide. The aim of the current study is to address these questions. The primary aims of the study were to determine the extent to which excess psychological morbidity exists among students in schools where a schoolmate has recently died by suicide and to examine whether attitudes about coping strategies and help-seeking are more or less problematic among these exposed students

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