| Papers [1-15] of 100 :: [Page 1 of 7] | | Go to page : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 —> | Search results on "YOUTH SUICIDE": |
|
|
Youth Suicide, 2002. Examines the predictive factors in suicide among children and youth. 3,641 words (approx. 14.6 pages), 15 sources, APA, $ 101.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract Of the 300,000 people who attempt suicide every year in the United States, about 10 percent succeed. Suicide is the second leading cause of death in children under 15 years of age; and about one in every ten teenagers will attempt to commit suicide before they finish high school.
Moreover, since 1950, suicide among young people has increased by 250 percent and the number is climbing. In Los Angeles county alone in one year, youth suicide climbed 80 percent. These alarming statistics highlight the importance of the need to fully understand the factors that contribute to suicide among youth. The first part of this paper examines the current research investigating predictors of suicide in young people. To this end, three categories of suicide predictor research are examined: Studies using clinical samples; studies using non-clinical samples and studies comparing predictors of clinical and non-clinical samples. The second part of this paper examines the story of one tragic youth who committed suicide in front of his classmates, as well as the issues faced by youth suicide in one major county. The review ends with the formulation of several conclusions concerning factors that assist in predicting suicide risk in young people.
From the Paper "Hutchings (1998) has suggested that another factor that may place children and adolescents at higher risk of suicide is if they witness domestic violence in their homes. In her study of a small sample of adolescents, Hutchings observed that adolescents who witness violence in the home are at an increased risk of trying to handle their own problems using violent methods; probably because their parents have modeled this behavior. Being at increased risk of using violence as a mechanism for coping, Hutchings feels that these teens could well be at increased risk of handling pain via suicide."
| |
|
Suicide amoung Youth, 1991. This paper discusses suicide amoung youth: Statistics, demographics and social,psychological and biological factors. 1,350 words (approx. 5.4 pages), 12 sources, $ 47.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
From the Paper "Suicide among the youth population is a problem which has been recognized all the way back to the Middle Ages and is one which has sparked a great deal of discussion among professionals in medicine, psychology, and psychiatry. Interest in youth suicide has increased considerably over the past 20 years, in keeping with a concurrent rise in the rate of suicide among youth. Researchers now place suicide as either the number one, two or three leading cause of death among 15 to 24 year-olds in the United States. These numbers reflect a tripling of the rate of suicide since the 1950's. The variation in placement of suicide as a leading cause of death is due to varying interpretations of "accidental ... "
| |
|
Suicide and Homosexual Youth, 2006. This paper discusses the disproportionate rate of suicide among gay, lesbian and bisexual youth (GBLT). 1,355 words (approx. 5.4 pages), 5 sources, APA, $ 45.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract This paper explains that, because society often condemns, discriminates and bullied them, gay, lesbian and bisexual youths (GBLT) are provoked into committing suicide because of their feelings of self-pity and self-hatred, which result in despair and depression. The author points out that, in North America, about 70 percent of GLBT reported experiencing some form of harassment or violence and more than half of the attempted suicides among this age group are GLBT. The paper stresses that these persons need immediate help, such as the process of crisis intervention, which the paper describes. The paper includes several quotations.
From the Paper "A young person starts their sexual identity during their adolescence period. In this period, he can distinguish his own feelings, actions, and attractions to other people are getting visible. During adolescence, young people tend to experience their first adult erotic feelings, experiment with sexual behaviors, and develop a strong sense of their own gender identity and sexual orientation; gender identification includes understanding that a person is male or female as well as understanding the roles, values, duties, and responsibilities of being a man or a woman."
| |
|
Suicide Among Youth and the Elderly, 2002. Compares and contrasts suicide in both age groups. 1,125 words (approx. 4.5 pages), 8 sources, $ 39.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract Compares and contrasts suicide in both age groups. Epidemiological diagnoses (risk factors, psychiatric illness, health changes, depression, hopelessness). Behavioral diagnosis (family discord, love problems, substance abuse, school problems, social isolation). Educational diagnosis (influence of peers, home, school). Use of firearms as most popular method of suicide of both age groups.
From the Paper "Suicide Among Youth and the Elderly
This research paper will present, compare and contrast the topic of suicide among the youth and the elderly. Focus will also include a description of an epidemiological, behavioral, and educational diagnosis.
Suicide Among the Youth
The CDC reported that the number of suicides in 1988 was 30,575 or 11.13 per 100,000 American population. Suicide is the eighth leading cause of death. Females attempt suicide more than males, and males die four times more (73% white males). Suicide is the third cause of death for those ages 15 to 24, the fourth leading cause of death for those ages 10 to 14 years, and rates increase with age (highest for 65 years and older) (NCIPC, 2001; The Surgeon General, 1999). Firearm-related suicides are the most popular..."
| |
|
Homophobia and Suicide in GLBT Youth, 2005. Examines the stressors of being young and gay and the relationship of stress to suicidal ideation. 2,076 words (approx. 8.3 pages), 9 sources, APA, $ 65.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract This paper details the various stressors gay youth encounter when they 'come out' from parents, friends, school, and society in general. The paper ties these variables together and makes the argument for increased suicidal ideation in gay youth, citing the aforementioned stressors as antecedents.
From the Paper "Young people are particularly impressionable to the attitudes, ideologies, and norms of society, thus homosexual youth are affected by ?negative attitudes and hostile reactions of our society to homosexuality? (Chauvin et al,. 2000:9). Furthermore, society offers little in ways to seek refuge from homophobia and the attitudes it places upon the oppressed youth, and many areas require minors to have permission from their parents before engaging in therapy or attending gay/lesbian programs at outreach centers. ?The outcome of societal barriers along with negative responses to a homosexual orientation may facilitate a young gay or lesbian person to exhibit a low self-esteem, depression, and a generalized fear, consequently, resulting in a deteriorated and fragile identity on the part of a young homosexual person? (Chauvin et al., 2000:9-10)."
| |
|
Suicide Among Lesbian Youths, 1995. Examines the causes and preventive measures for foster care situations. Discusses incidence, stress, depression and the role of social workers. 2,475 words (approx. 9.9 pages), 13 sources, $ 87.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
From the Paper "SUICIDE PREVENTION FOR LESBIANS IN FOSTER CARE
Introduction
The purpose of this paper is to examine the current literature on suicide prevention efforts designed for lesbian youth in foster care situations. The report provides context by examining the literature on the general problems faced by lesbian youth and the contribution of these problems to the development of suicidal feelings in general and to suicidal feelings in the foster care situation in particular. The report ends with a discussion of steps that can be taken to remediate the pressures leading to suicidal behavior for lesbian youth in foster care.
Suicide Among Lesbian Youths
Prevalence Rates and Causative Factors"
| |
|
Suicide in Children: Predictive Factors, 2002. Study examining whether there are recurring factors which could help in early detection of potential suicidal behavior in children and young adults. 3,654 words (approx. 14.6 pages), 15 sources, MLA, $ 101.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract The first part of this paper examines the current research investigating predictors of suicide in young people. To this end, three categories of suicide predictor research are examined: studies using clinical samples; studies using non-clinical samples; and studies comparing predictors of clinical and non-clinical samples. The second part of this paper examines both one tragic youth who committed suicide in front of his classmates as well as the issues faced by youth suicide in one major county. The review ends with the formulation of several conclusions concerning factors that assist in predicting suicide risk in young people.
From the Paper "What variables place children and adolescents at risk for suicide? Some researchers have searched for the answer to this question by investigating clinical samples. In one such study, Lipschitz, Winegar, Nicholoau, Hartnick, Wolfson and Southwick (1999) assessed suicide risk in 34 boys and 37 girls who were inpatients in psychiatric hospitals.
About 51 percent of sample patients had attempted suicide. Findings of the study indicated that those who had attempted suicide were significantly more likely to be female, to report sexual, physical, and emotional abuse, and to, themselves, endorse emotional neglect as a method of rearing children. In an effort to determine the magnitude of the different effects exerted by predictor variables, Lipschitz et. al (1999) conducted a multivariate analysis, which revealed that female gender, sexual abuse, and emotional neglect remained significant predictors of both self-mutilation behavior and suicidal ideation. Based on these findings, Lipschitz and associates concluded that emotional neglect was one of the more powerful predictors of suicidal behavior in hospitalized adolescents than physical abuse, emotional abuse, and physical neglect."
| |
|
Adolescent Suicide, 2004. In-depth study of adolescent suicide among minorities. 18,086 words (approx. 72.3 pages), 94 sources, APA, $ 249.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract This paper studies the research available on the problem of suicide among minority youth. The paper looks at the possible causes of suicide, methods of prevention, risk factors, characteristics of people with suicidal tendencies, gender differences in suicide attempts, and a host of other pertinent aspects. The paper also dispels some of the myths surrounding the causes of suicide and considers the question of whether suicide can, at times, be acceptable.
Discussion of Adolescent Suicide in General
Theories of Minority Suicide
Risk Factors
Economic Status
Undiagnosed Mental Health Issues
Time, Season, Weather, and Suicide
Protective Factors
Preventing Suicide
From the Paper "One innovative theory on the subject of minority suicide is that, the complexity of suicide from the logical point of view remains unsettled. Neither common sense nor clinical psychopathology has established a fundamental or even a firmly experiential solution. Freud had made a similar declaration in 1918 in abridging a psychoanalytic conference on suicide in Vienna. Theories of suicide have not undergone enough magnification. Maybe the most that has been accomplished in the last twenty years has been a more happy unification of the sociologic and psychoanalytic information, as well as, augmented recognition that suicide is more a number of conditions than a separate psychologic entity."
| |
|
Homophobia and Suicide, 2004. A summary of research on suicide in GLBT (gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender) youth. 2,151 words (approx. 8.6 pages), 9 sources, APA, $ 67.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract Various factors contribute greatly to suicide in GLBT youth. This paper discusses various sociological pressures placed upon this demographic and provides overviews of various studies that have been done.
From the Paper Whether we like it or not, gender roles are inescapable realities of a social schema. Over time society forms a definition of what it is to be male and female, and in many instances (such as our own in the United States), this definition is unrealistically rigid. Concepts of gender in American society revolve around maleness as a mythical but nonetheless actualized and perpetuated norm. Inherent in this male-centric modality is the assumption of heterosexuality. When someone functioning in this schema fails to meet the male heterosexual classification, they are labeled as the ?other,? and must then deal with a cavalcade of implications reinforced by society?s expectation and demands. How does a population branded as the ?other? function and cope in society? This paper will examine specifically if social constructs of homosexuality,particularly in homosexual youth, have higher risk factors for suicide than their heterosexual counterparts.
| |
|
Emile Durkheim- 'Suicide', 2002. A term paper summarizing Durkheims "suicide". It is a paper that paraphrases what Durkheim actually meant when he wrote Suicide. Each paragraph covers Egotistic, Anomie, and Alturistic suicide. 1,876 words (approx. 7.5 pages), 2 sources, APA, $ 60.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract This essay focuses on the work of Durkheim entitled "Suicide. " The author attempts to understand Durkheim's work, the role of sociology in suicide, the ambiguity surrounding the definition of suicide and the forms of suicide.
From the Paper Suicide, Durkheim's third major work is of importance as it was his first attempt to bring empiricism into Sociology. Empiricism would provide a sociological explanation for phenomena such as suicide, which was traditionally regarded as restrictively psychological or biological. Durkheim defined the role of Sociology as comparable to Biology in natural science. Both disciplines study the normal or abnormal characteristics of phenomena, which affect the strength, or weakness of the organism. Sociology's main focus is to "study facts external to the individual" (Thompson 1985:92). When the term suicide comes to mind, we do not automatically link it with Sociology. Suicide can be argued to be a mental state, which is reserved mostly for the discipline of psychology. Durkheim looks at how this perceived mental state can be brought into Sociology by looking at elements such as family, occupations and social ties, all of which are a part of society and the root of Sociology. These elements are "always contemporaneous with some crisis which temporarily affects the social state" (Thompson 1985:95). Looking at society's groups, Durkheim noted that each "population had its own suicide rate, and that this rate is more constant than the general mortality".
| |
|
Suicide in Children and Adolescents, 2002. An examination of predictive factors. 3,600 words (approx. 14.4 pages), 14 sources, $ 127.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract Examines predictive factors. Increase of suicide in young people. Current studies and research into predictors of suicide. Factors that place youth at-risk. Profille of a child or adolescent most likely to commit suicide. Also examines one teenager who committed suicide in front of his classmates & issues of youth suicide in Los Angeles County, 1998-1999.
From the Paper "Suicide in Children: Predictive Factors
Introduction
According to Hill (1998), of the 300,000 people who attempt suicide every year, about 10 percent succeed. Suicide is the second leading cause of death in kids under 15 years of age; and about one in every ten teenagers will attempt to commit suicide before they finish high school.
Moreover, since 1950 suicide among young people has increased by 250 percent and is showing signs of continuing to increase (Hill, 1998). In Los Angeles county alone in one year, youth suicide climbed 80 percent (Rivera 2001). These alarming statistics highlight the importance of the need to fully understand the factors that contribute to suicide among youth.
The first part of this paper examines the current research..."
| |
|
Suicide, 2008. A comparison of the arguments of Immanuel Kant in "Suicide and Duty" and David Hume in "Of Suicide." 1,578 words (approx. 6.3 pages), 2 sources, MLA, $ 51.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract This paper presents David Hume's argument against suicide as described in "Of Suicide." It discusses his arguments based on God's plan for human beings and the establishment of immutable laws that cannot be transgressed, although he does defend suicide in certain scenarios. It then discusses Immanuel Kant's argument against suicide in "Suicide and Duty" and his position that suicide can never be justified.
From the Paper "Kant (1930) provides the strongest position on the immorality of suicide. Although Hume (1874) defends suicide in certain cases, he based his entire argument in God's plan for human beings and the establishment of immutable laws that cannot be transgressed. Those laws are, in fact, providence, designed to protect human beings and guide them. The problem with Hume's (1874) argument is that in a universe that is completely controlled and determined by God, there is no choice for the human being. All that anyone can do is to accept and observe the laws. The whole argument depends on whether has faith in God. Kant's (1930) argument focuses on the human being as having a great deal of worth and as a person who is a moral agent. The person can commit suicide but the choice is made on the basis of a higher purpose which is that person's own purpose."
| |
|
"Le Suicide", 2007. An analysis of Emile Durkheim's theories on suicide, as presented in his book, "Le Suicide". 754 words (approx. 3.0 pages), 7 sources, MLA, $ 26.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract This paper discusses "Le Suicide," Emile Durkheim's reportedly "flawed masterpiece" on suicide which was published in 1897. The paper describes Durkheim's theories on anomic suicide and egoistic suicide and discusses how they differ. The paper discusses Durkheim's comparison of the relation to marriage's effect on suicide's frequency to anomic and egoistic suicides.
Table of Contents:
Introduction
Flawed Masterpiece
Durkheim's Explanations
A, if not "The" Central Theme
In Light of Suicide's Darkness
Conclusion
From the Paper "In Le Suicide, Durkheim purported that anomic suicide transpires when a person's existence is destitute of restrictions and recognition and by other individuals in society. "Anomic suicides, as Durkheim described them, destroy themselves in remorse over their abandonment by society, for they cannot support the loneliness of anonymity." (Siebers)"
"Durkheim contended that egoistic suicide evolves from a person no longer being able to conclude he/she has a reason for living. Egoistic suicides radically reject society, as they are dramatically removed from the "normal social justifications of existence." Egoistic, as well as, anomic suicides reportedly stem from society's inadequate presence in a person or their larger persona. "'Egoistic suicide,'" Durkheim concludes, "'results from man's no longer finding a basis for existence in life'." (Ibid)"
| |
|
Assisted Suicide, 2007. An analysis of Plato's views on suicide and assisted suicide, as seen in his works. 1,556 words (approx. 6.2 pages), 5 sources, MLA, $ 51.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract This paper discusses the views of the ancient philosopher, Plato, on suicide. The paper shows that his views, when examined in the context of assisted suicide, show his stance to be one of general disapproval, with a few exceptions. The paper examines his general views in "Phaedo," "Laws" and "The Republic" and then discuss the exceptions to his stance.
From the Paper "The only assisted suicide Plato would find acceptable based on his beliefs of suicide in general and on his beliefs regarding medical assistance, would be an assisted suicide for the terminally ill and disabled. Again, however, Plato's views on this matter suggest the decision to end the life of such a person would not be in the hands of the ill, but in the views of society in terms of the individual's ability to contribute to moral and social standards. Since the modern view of assisted suicide refers to an individual's choice to end life, such an act would be disapproved of by Plato. Only in cases where society views the individual as a burden, and thus, as an undesirable citizen, would such an assisted suicide be seen as morally acceptable. To assist an individual who is capable of contributing to society, but is simply unwilling to do so, would be morally reprehensible."
| |
|
Suicide & the American Indian, 2006. An analysis of suicide trends among the American Indian population. 1,825 words (approx. 7.3 pages), 14 sources, MLA, $ 58.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract This paper studies the statistically high rate of suicide among American Indian youth, focusing on the impact of acculturation. The paper begins with a brief discussion of the suicide statistics and their distribution among particular tribes. Then the paper takes a critical look at the historical phenomenon of acculturation. Among the effects of acculturation examined are geographic isolation and confinement to the reservation, which led to the disorganization of traditional family structures. The paper then explores how these impacted the negative self-image of youth, and in particular male youth, which is a major contributor to suicide.
From the Paper "In a white man's society the American Indian held little status. While there was slavery, black man may have been deprived of his body and labor and kept from being a part of white society; the American Indian was robbed of his land and forced to acculturate. The American Indians were not free to practice their religion in a land that proclaimed religious freedom. When the census was taken, a black man was counted as half a person; an American Indian was not even considered a human being. This only changed when the white man wanted to buy land; legally an American Indian had to be a human being to sell it (Allen 1973)."
|
|
|