Suicide and Friendships Among American Adolescents
Peter S. Bearman, PhD and
James Moody, PhD
Peter S. Bearman is with the Sociology Department and the Institute for Social and Economic Research and Policy, Columbia University, New York, NY. James Moody is with the Department of Sociology, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio.
Correspondence: Requests for reprints should be sent to Peter Bearman, PhD, Institute for Social and Economic Research and Policy, Suite 814, IAB, 420 W 118th St, Columbia University, New York, NY. (e-mail: psb17{at}columbia.edu).
Objectives. We investigated the relationship between friendshipsand suicidality among male and female adolescents.
Methods. We analyzed friendship data on 13 465 adolescents fromthe National Longitudinal Survey of Adolescent Health to explorethe relationship between friendship and suicidal ideation andsuicide attempts. We controlled for known factors associatedwith suicidality.
Results. Having had a friend who committed suicide increasedthe likelihood of suicidal ideation and attempts for both boysand girls. Socially isolated females were more likely to havesuicidal thoughts, as were females whose friends were not friendswith each other. Among adolescents thinking about suicide, suicideattempts appear largely stochastic, with few consistent riskfactors between boys and girls.
Conclusions. The friendship environment affects suicidalityfor both boys and girls. Female adolescents suicidalthoughts are significantly increased by social isolation andfriendship patterns in which friends were not friends with eachother.
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