The power of (mis)perception: Rethinking suicide contagion in youth friendship networks

Citation

Zimmerman, Gregory M.; Rees, Carter; Posick, Chad; & Zimmerman, Lori A. (2016). The power of (mis)perception: Rethinking suicide contagion in youth friendship networks. Social Science and Medicine. vol. 157 pp. 31-38

Abstract

Suicide is a leading cause of death among youth. In the wake of peer suicide, youth are vulnerable to suicide contagion. But, questions remain about the mechanisms through which suicide spreads and the accuracy of youths' estimates of friends' suicidal behaviors. This study addresses these questions within school-aged youths' friendship networks. Social network data were drawn from two schools in the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health, from which 2180 youth in grades 7–12 nominated up to ten friends. A measure of “perceived” friends' attempted suicide was constructed based on respondents' reports of their friends' attempted suicide. This measure was broader than a “true” measure of friends' attempted suicide, constructed from self-reports of nominated friends who attended respondents' schools. Sociograms graphically represented the accuracy with which suicide attempters estimated friends' suicide attempts. Results from cross-tabulation with Chi-square analysis indicated that approximately 4% of youth (88/2180) attempted suicide, and these youth disproportionately misperceived (predominantly overestimated) friends' suicidal behaviors, compared to non-suicide-attempters. Penalized logistic regression models indicated that friends' self-reported attempted suicide was unrelated to respondent attempted suicide. But, the odds of respondent attempted suicide were 2.54 times higher (95% CI, 1.06–6.10) among youth who accurately perceived friends' attempted suicide, and 5.40 times higher (95% CI, 3.34–8.77) among youth who overestimated friends' attempted suicide. The results suggest that at-risk youth overestimate their friends' suicidal behaviors, which exacerbates their own risk of suicidal behavior. Methodologically, this suggests that a continued collaboration among network scientists, suicide researchers, and medical providers is necessary to further examine the mechanisms surrounding this phenomenon. Practically, it is important to screen at-risk youth for exposure to peer suicide and to use the social environment created by adolescent friendship networks to empower and support youth who are susceptible to suicidal thoughts and behaviors.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2016.03.046

Keyword(s)

Suicide Suicide contagion Social networks Adolescent health Misperception

Reference Type

Journal Article

Journal Title

Social Science and Medicine

Author(s)

Zimmerman, Gregory M.
Rees, Carter
Posick, Chad
Zimmerman, Lori A.

Year Published

2016

Volume Number

157

Pages

31-38

Edition

April 1, 2016

DOI

10.1016/j.socscimed.2016.03.046

Reference ID

8072