Jersey Girl wrote:Res Ipsa wrote:Or, maybe it’s the guns. https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/ar ... ns/560771/
The article begins as follows:Americans of high-school age are 82 times more likely to die from a gun homicide than 15- to 19-year-olds in the rest of the developed world.
The article says nothing about suicide rates, does it? Here's the CDC stats from 2014. These are the most currently posted stats I can locate on the website. According to the 2014 stats, teen suicide rates outnumber teen homicides.
https://www.cdc.gov/injury/images/lc-ch ... 0w760h.gif
Do you think that the number of students killed in mass shootings is significantly higher than those who died from complete suicide?
Is it the guns or mental illness? Which is the more likely explanation?
Let me preface my response by stating that I very much admire your consistent focus on the well being of children. I think you are an effective and tenacious advocate for children. i also find the notion of suicide by young folks to be tragic. Each suicide by a young person is, in my opinion, one too many.
All that being said, to understand what is going on requires looking at some numbers. The problem with the stats you linked to is that they really don't tell us much. If we're going to list causes of death by frequency, then something is always going to be the number one cause, the number two cause, etc. The fact that suicides rank high for younger folks is, in part, an artifact of the fact that the most significant causes of death in the US (heart disease and cancer) don't affect young people at a high rate. Neither do there diseases. That fact pushes other causes up in the ranks.
Another thing to keep in mind is that when we talk about rates of teen suicide, we are talking about small percentages -- less than .2% As a result, relatively small changes in absolute numbers can result in dramatic changes in percentage increase. Here's an example: https://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/su ... 15b1be13f4 The article correctly states that the rate of teen suicides by girls doubled over the selected period to time. But that doubling was from a rate of .02% to .04% -- relatively small in terms of absolute numbers.
But the data in the Huffpost article does give us a a bit of historical perspective. Note that the suicide rate for teen boys in 2015 was lower than it was in 1990.
So, let's look at some comparative data. Here's how the rate of suicide in the US compares with other countries: https://www.oecd.org/els/family/CO_4_4_ ... uicide.pdf The US is higher than the average, but is certainly not among the outliers with significantly elevated rates of teen suicide.
How does the US rate of suicide change with age? https://www.google.com/imgres?imgurl=ht ... g..i&w=960 The rate of teen suicides is lower than that of every older age group. In other words, although other causes of death increase with age and eclipse suicide as a cause of death, the rate of suicide also increases after the teenage years.
The aggregate suicide data for the US conceals some interesting demographic and spatial features. For example, the rates of suicide for white Americans is significantly higher for white folks than it is for black or hispanic folks. https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/hestat/su ... 9_2014.pdf In fact, for young black men, the rate of homicide is around five times higher than the rate of suicide. https://www.cdc.gov/healthequity/lcod/m ... /index.htm The rate of homicide for young, male hispanics is also higher than that for suicide, but the difference is much smaller. So, when you focus on the significance of teen suicide over teen homicide as a cause of death, you are doing so through racially tinted glasses.
Finally, suicide in the US displays distinct regional patterns. Here's a recent article from the Department of Health and Human Services that shows the differences in suicide rates by state and discusses the contrast between change of rates in rural and urban areas. It also discusses the linkage between suicide rates and availability of guns. https://www.cdc.gov/healthequity/lcod/m ... /index.htm.
The article also touches on, but doesn't discuss in detail, problems with the data. As the map in the article shows, many counties simply don't report data on deaths by suicide. This is particularly true in the center of the country. It may be that the only counties that do report suicide deaths in that area of the country are those that have noticed relatively high rates of death. If so, then the nationally reported rate overstates the actual rate.
The article also states:
Alternatively, part of the longer-term increase may simply have to do with how suicides are reported. Advocates say state reporting has improved, and suicide deaths are now better counted in state and federal data.
There has been a significant stigma associated with suicide. The law firm I worked for did defense work for the coroner's office. It defended a number of long, hard-fought, and bitter lawsuits by parents over determinations that their children had committed suicide. in my opinion, part of the stigma has its origins in religious belief. Some in the notion that the suicide of a child reflects a failure by the parents. It is entirely possible that, as with the autism "epidemic," the reported increase in suicides is an artifact of better reporting practices as opposed to an actual increase in the rate of suicides.
Finally, the geographical regions in the US with higher reported rates of gun deaths are also associated with higher rates of gun ownership. https://www.motherjones.com/politics/20 ... -in-three/ The map of gun ownership looks quite a bit like the map of suicide rates.
So, what does all this tell us? I think "why" is the correct question, but that doesn't mean the correct question is "why are young people slaughtering themselves?" Rather, the correct question is something like "why does the reported data look the way it does?" Are we really seeing a significant increase in teen suicides, or is the apparent increase due to better and more accurate reporting of cause of death? Why are reported rates of suicide so much higher for young, white, rural men in the US so much higher than they are for women, blacks, hispanics, and urban folks?
In answer to your question, is it more likely that young white, rural men have significantly higher rates of mental illness or that they have easier access to a deadly and efficient way of killing themselves? Given the data we have, I think it's entirely reasonable to start with the guns.