Attempted Suicide
| Most
recent CO value (2005) |
CO
rank (2005) |
CO
value (2005) |
Best
state (2005) |
Best
state value (2005) |
HP
2010 target |
6.7% |
6/40
= 7/50 |
6.7% |
Vermont |
6.2% |
1% |
Indicator Definition
High school students who report they have attempted
suicide one or more times during the past 12 months.
| High
school students who attempted suicide in
past year in Colorado5 |
 |
|
 |
| High
school students who attempted suicide in
past year by sex and race in Colorado6 |
 |
|
Indicator Significance
Someone commits suicide every 17 minutes in
the United States. Suicide peaks during mid-adolescence
with approximately 2 million attempts each year. Although the
overall suicide rate has decreased over time, it has nearly tripled
for the 15 – 24
age group. Half of those who make one attempt
are likely to make another. The best means to prevent suicide
is education about how to recognize the warning signs often linked
to mental illnesses such as chronic depression and bipolar disorder.
Ninety percent of suicides are related to a history of mental
illness rather than one singular event.1
Colorado Specifics
The Rocky Mountain region has the highest suicide
rate in the nation for all ages. Colorado loses
approximately 48 teenagers each year to suicide, making it the
second leading cause of death for those between the ages of 15 – 19.
Yet compared to 40 other states, Colorado ranked sixth lowest
in the percentage of high school students who attempted suicide
in 2005. Suicide attempts among high school students have decreased
in recent years, reaching 6.7 percent in 2005 compared to 13.2
percent in 2003. High school aged girls are three times more likely
to attempt suicide compared to boys, and percentages are higher
among Hispanics than white high school students.2
Promising Initiatives
In Colorado
The Colorado Trust has provided grants to 10
communities throughout the state to invest
in suicide prevention, and as of August, 2007,
the Trust announced it will continue to fund these programs, as
well as two additional ones. This funding initiative has reached
into 31 counties, raising awareness and reducing the stigma of suicide.
The Trust awarded $75,000 to Mental Health America Corporation,
the state’s
most comprehensive suicide prevention and education program, to
oversee the Colorado Suicide Prevention and Intervention Plan. Over
a seven year period (2002 – 2009)
the Trust has dedicated $4.9 million to the
cause of reducing suicide in the state.3
Elsewhere
The legislature in Washington State supported
an initiative created by parents who lost
their sons to suicide in 1995. The Youth
Suicide Prevention Program (YSPP) evolved to become a private
non-profit organization in 2001, supported by the Department of
Health and the School of Nursing at the University of Washington.
YSPP educates teens through school-based campaigns and curriculum
while also training teachers, administrators, and parents how
to discuss the issue and identify at-risk teens. YSPP has been
successful in working with the media by providing guidelines on
how to report teen suicide if it does occur, in order to reduce
the risk of copycat suicide attempts.4
High school students
who attempted suicide in past year7

Text
- “2006 Fact Sheet on Suicide,“ National
Adolescent Health Information Center
“Suicide in Youth,” National
Alliance on Mental Illness
- “Mental Health Among Colorado’s
Youth,” Colorado Connections for
Health Schools
”Youth
and Suicide,” Colorado State
University Extension
- The
Colorado Trust
- Youth Suicide
Prevention Program
Charts
- Source: Colorado
Department of Public Health and Environment,
Youth Risk Behavior Survey, 2001 – 2005
- Source: Colorado
Department of Public Health and Environment,
Youth Risk Behavior Survey, 2005
- Source: National
Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and
Health Promotion, Healthy Youth, 2005, Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention
|