Population-Based Surveillance of Suicidality Among Adolescents Who do not Endorse Suicide Risks and Implications for Screening

Objective

Suicide screening guidelines based on findings from aggregated data conceal subpopulation vulnerabilities. Risk factors for a suicide attempt (SA), such as suicidal ideation (SI), may differ in frequency or be absent in certain ethnoracial youth subgroups. Thus, accurate identification of suicide risk remains a challenge, and guidelines are inconsistent.

Methods

This cross-sectional study used data from the 2019 and 2022 waves of the Minnesota Student Survey of eighth, ninth, and 11th graders. Students in 12 ethnoracially diverse groups self-reported their race and ethnicity, past-year SI and SA, and past 2-week symptoms of depression and anxiety. We used stratified chi-squared tests by sex and ethnoracial group for bivariate analyses. Logistic regression models adjusted for food insecurity, unstable housing, and mental health treatment, examined odds of SA.

Results

About 3.0% of male students attempted suicide in the past year. Of these youth, 35.9% denied depressive symptoms, 39.8% denied anxiety symptoms, and 14.8% denied SI, especially Somali (47.8%) and multiracial (26.3%) male students. Among the 7.3% of female students who attempted suicide during the preceding year, 25.4% denied depressive symptoms, 24.6% denied anxiety symptoms, and about 8.0% denied SI, especially Somali (29.7%) and Black (12.5%) female students. Students who reported depressive or anxiety symptoms, especially male students, had increased odds of SA.

Conclusions

A higher proportion of males, certain Black subgroups, and multiracial students reported a past-year SA without endorsing symptoms of depression, anxiety, or SI. Future research should assess for whom screening tools work, mitigate screening limitations, and normalize minoritized experiences.

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