{"title":"黑人青年自杀及其他问题特刊","authors":"Beverly J. Vandiver","doi":"10.1177/00957984231188598","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"I became concerned about Black suicide after I started working in the mental health field, first as a counselor in training at a community mental health center, then as a crisis counselor at a local hospital, and later as a psychologist at a university counseling center. As distressing as it is to work with adult clients who have given up on life, it is even more distressing to hear children, as young as 3 and 5 years old to report feelings of depression and suicidal intentions. Prior to the mid-2000s, the prevalent concern about suicide was not about youth’s suicide or about Black youth suicide, but the focus was on young adults. But the trend has changed and the reason for this special issue. What has sparked this focus on Black youth suicide? Data. Historically, Black populations have had lower levels of death by suicide compared to other ethnic groups (Gibbs, 1997). This pattern has been considered a paradox: A low rate of suicide in Black population despite the persistence of racial discrimination and oppression since the beginning of slavery. However, this trend changed. Since 2017, suicide became the third leading cause of death for Black male youth, aged 1–19, just behind homicide and unintentional injury (motor vehicle crashes, falls, fires, burns, drownings, poisonings; Centers for Disease Control & Prevention [CDC], 2017). This was the first time since documenting these statistics that rates of suicide among children 13 years or younger were almost two times higher for Black children than White children (Bridge et al., 2018). Over the past 20 years Black suicide rate youth in the 10-19 age range has increased (about 60%) faster than other racial/ethnic groups (American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry [AACAP], 2022)","PeriodicalId":2,"journal":{"name":"ACS Applied Bio Materials","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":4.6000,"publicationDate":"2023-05-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Special Issue on Black Youth Suicide and Beyond\",\"authors\":\"Beverly J. Vandiver\",\"doi\":\"10.1177/00957984231188598\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"I became concerned about Black suicide after I started working in the mental health field, first as a counselor in training at a community mental health center, then as a crisis counselor at a local hospital, and later as a psychologist at a university counseling center. As distressing as it is to work with adult clients who have given up on life, it is even more distressing to hear children, as young as 3 and 5 years old to report feelings of depression and suicidal intentions. Prior to the mid-2000s, the prevalent concern about suicide was not about youth’s suicide or about Black youth suicide, but the focus was on young adults. But the trend has changed and the reason for this special issue. What has sparked this focus on Black youth suicide? Data. Historically, Black populations have had lower levels of death by suicide compared to other ethnic groups (Gibbs, 1997). This pattern has been considered a paradox: A low rate of suicide in Black population despite the persistence of racial discrimination and oppression since the beginning of slavery. However, this trend changed. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
我开始在心理健康领域工作后,开始关注黑人自杀问题。我先是在一家社区心理健康中心担任培训咨询师,然后在一家当地医院担任危机咨询师,后来在一家大学咨询中心担任心理学家。与那些已经放弃生活的成年客户一起工作是令人痛苦的,更令人痛苦的是,听到年仅3岁和5岁的孩子报告他们的抑郁感和自杀意图。在2000年代中期之前,对自杀的普遍关注不是关于青少年自杀或黑人青年自杀,而是关注年轻人。但是趋势已经改变了,这是本期特刊的原因。是什么引发了对黑人青年自杀的关注?数据。从历史上看,与其他种族群体相比,黑人人口的自杀死亡率较低(Gibbs, 1997)。这种模式被认为是一个悖论:尽管自奴隶制开始以来一直存在种族歧视和压迫,但黑人的自杀率却很低。然而,这种趋势发生了变化。自2017年以来,自杀已成为1-19岁黑人男性青年的第三大死因,仅次于他杀和意外伤害(车祸、坠落、火灾、烧伤、溺水、中毒;疾病预防控制中心[CDC], 2017)。这是自记录这些统计数据以来,黑人儿童13岁及以下儿童的自杀率几乎是白人儿童的两倍(Bridge et al., 2018)。在过去的20年里,10-19岁的黑人青年自杀率的增长(约60%)比其他种族/族裔群体快(美国儿童与青少年精神病学学会,2022)。
I became concerned about Black suicide after I started working in the mental health field, first as a counselor in training at a community mental health center, then as a crisis counselor at a local hospital, and later as a psychologist at a university counseling center. As distressing as it is to work with adult clients who have given up on life, it is even more distressing to hear children, as young as 3 and 5 years old to report feelings of depression and suicidal intentions. Prior to the mid-2000s, the prevalent concern about suicide was not about youth’s suicide or about Black youth suicide, but the focus was on young adults. But the trend has changed and the reason for this special issue. What has sparked this focus on Black youth suicide? Data. Historically, Black populations have had lower levels of death by suicide compared to other ethnic groups (Gibbs, 1997). This pattern has been considered a paradox: A low rate of suicide in Black population despite the persistence of racial discrimination and oppression since the beginning of slavery. However, this trend changed. Since 2017, suicide became the third leading cause of death for Black male youth, aged 1–19, just behind homicide and unintentional injury (motor vehicle crashes, falls, fires, burns, drownings, poisonings; Centers for Disease Control & Prevention [CDC], 2017). This was the first time since documenting these statistics that rates of suicide among children 13 years or younger were almost two times higher for Black children than White children (Bridge et al., 2018). Over the past 20 years Black suicide rate youth in the 10-19 age range has increased (about 60%) faster than other racial/ethnic groups (American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry [AACAP], 2022)