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Interpersonal violence and suicide risk: Examining buffering effects of school and community connectedness.

Authors :
Berny, Lauren M.
Tanner-Smith, Emily E.
Source :
Children & Youth Services Review. Feb2024, Vol. 157, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

• The prior attempt risk group reported significantly higher rates of interpersonal violence than the ideation only group. • Teacher support, peer interactions, and neighborhood social connection buffered the association between sexual abuse and prior attempts. • Neighborhood social connection buffered the association between physical abuse and prior suicide attempts. • Tailored efforts to enhance social connectedness in youth exposed to violence could be a promising secondary suicide prevention strategy. Exposure to interpersonal violence is associated with elevated suicide risk. Preventing suicide among high-risk adolescents is most often discussed from a clinical treatment perspective, resulting in a gap in research examining whether school and community connectedness can buffer the relationships between forms of interpersonal violence and suicide risk in clinical samples of adolescents. Baseline data from 294 adolescents who received substance use treatment were analyzed to help fill this gap in research. Adolescents in this sample were at greater risk for suicidal thoughts and behaviors given their histories of substance use disorders and high rates of interpersonal violence, with 57% reporting experiencing at least one form of abuse/violence. Independent variables included lifetime exposure to physical abuse, sexual abuse, and weapon violence; moderators included various measures of school and community connectedness. Multinomial logistic regression models were estimated to examine the main and interaction effects predicting a three-category measure of suicide risk: non-suicidal, suicidal ideation only, and prior suicide attempts. Sexual abuse survivors had the highest predicted probability of a prior suicide attempt when reporting lower levels of teacher support, school-based positive peer interactions, or neighborhood social connection, but at higher levels of these protective factors, their predicted probability was similar to those not exposed to sexual abuse. The same protective pattern was observed for physical abuse survivors with high neighborhood social connection. The buffering effects observed in this study identified dimensions of school and community social connectedness as protective factors for youth exposed to abuse. Although promoting social connectedness is often cited as a universal suicide prevention approach, tailored efforts to enhance connectedness within this population may also be a promising secondary prevention strategy. Thus, in addition to clinical treatment, more emphasis should be placed on systems-level approaches to reducing risk among youth most vulnerable to suicide. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01907409
Volume :
157
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Children & Youth Services Review
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
174975251
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.childyouth.2023.107405