Adolescent suicide: An ecological approach
- 29 May 2002
- journal article
- strategies for-behavioral-change
- Published by Wiley in Psychology in the Schools
- Vol. 39 (4) , 459-475
- https://doi.org/10.1002/pits.10042
Abstract
Adolescent suicide, which has been ranked among the top 10 causes of death in the world, is an issue of increasing concern to school psychologists, educators, and parents. Here an ecological approach is proposed to enhance our understanding of how personal, interpersonal, and sociocultural factors contribute to the increased risk for suicide among adolescents. The ecological approach allows exploration of how adolescent suicide is determined by multiple factors related to the adolescent's personal history or ontogenic development (e.g., depression), the influences of those individuals with whom adolescents have immediate contact with, or the microsystems (e.g., family and school), the larger social units, or the exosystems, that indirectly influence adolescents (e.g., media), and the larger culture or macrosystems (e.g., cultural differences in attitudes about suicide). In this article the interaction of several factors within and between the permeable boundaries of each of the layers of the ecological paradigm is also highlighted. Finally, examples of intervention and prevention strategies at each level of the system are set forth.Keywords
This publication has 105 references indexed in Scilit:
- Mental health CPR: Peer contracting as a response to potential suicide in adolescentsArchives of Suicide Research, 1998
- Celebrity suicide: Did the death of Kurt cobain influence young suicides in Australia?Archives of Suicide Research, 1997
- Adolescent suicide, depression and family dysfunctionActa Psychiatrica Scandinavica, 1995
- Attitudes about Suicide among the Yoruba of NigeriaThe Journal of Social Psychology, 1994
- “It's a white thing”: An exploration of beliefs about suicide in the African‐American communityDeviant Behavior, 1993
- Modelling and suicide: A test of the Werther effectBritish Journal of Social Psychology, 1992
- Measuring mutual causation: Effects of suicide news on suicides in JapanSocial Science Research, 1991
- The Impact of Suicide in Television MoviesNew England Journal of Medicine, 1986
- Clustering of Teenage Suicides after Television News Stories about SuicideNew England Journal of Medicine, 1986
- Imitation and Suicide: A Reexamination of the Werther EffectAmerican Sociological Review, 1984