Teen Suicide and Guns
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Protect your Teenager
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Many teens attempt suicide on impulse, and there's no second chance with a gun.
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Counting on a teen's ability to resist strong emotional impulses when there is a gun is not a good idea.
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Young people need safe environments that protect them from deadly harm.
Many teens who attempt suicide do so because of a temporary problem, like the end of a romance. When guns are involved, teens can waste their lives and destroy the happiness of their friends and families in an instant. They are thinking of a passing problem, not the outcome!
Teen Suicide—A Big Problem
Does a gun in the home increase the chance of suicide? YES!
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In states where there are more guns, more people commit suicide.
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Studies have shown that the risk of suicide is 4 to 10 times higher in homes with guns than in those without.
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If the gun is a handgun or is stored loaded or unlocked, the risk of suicide is even higher.
Does it matter how a person tries to commit suicide? YES!
Protect Young People from Killing Themselves
Teens often see any change as a major life event. Adults and teens need to talk about things, like budding sexuality and taking responsibility for one's own actions, as they occur.
It is best to not have any guns in homes where children or teenagers live.
If there is a gun:
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Keep it unloaded and locked up or with a trigger lock. Store the bullets in a different place that is also locked.
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Do not let teens have a key to the places where guns and bullets are stored.
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If a teen becomes depressed or has severe mood swings, store the gun outside the home for the time being.
Many communities have laws that prevent teenagers from getting their own weapons.
Find out what the laws are in your community and ask that they be enforced.
Most young survivors of a serious suicide attempt do not commit suicide later, and most survivors of suicide attempts are glad they were saved.
Copyright © 2006
Additional Resources
The Center for Young Women’s Health (CYWH) is a collaboration between the Division of Adolescent and Young Adult Medicine and the Division of Gynecology at Boston Children’s Hospital. The Center is an educational entity that exists to provide teen girls and young women with carefully researched health information, health education programs, and conferences.
Young Men’s Health (YMH) is produced by the Division of Adolescent and Young Adult Medicine at Boston Children’s Hospital. The purpose of the website is to provide carefully researched health information to teenage boys and young men.
The mission of girlshealth.gov is to promote healthy, positive behaviors in all girls. Girlshealth.gov gives girls reliable, useful information on the health issues they will face as they become young women, and tips on handling relationships with family and friends, at school and at home.
Information for employed teens.