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Journal Article

Citation

Wei Z, Mukherjee S. Am. J. Health Promot. 2020; ePub(ePub): ePub.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2020, SAGE Publications)

DOI

10.1177/0890117120977378

PMID

33297721

Abstract

PURPOSE: Identify and examine the associations between health behaviors and increased risk of adolescent suicide attempts, while controlling for socio-economic and demographic differences.

DESIGN: A data-driven analysis using cross-sectional data.

SETTING: Communities in the state of Montana from 1999 to 2017. Selected Montana as it persistently ranks among the top 3 vulnerable states in the U.S. over the past years.

SUBJECTS: Selected 22,447 adolescents of whom 1,631 adolescents attempted suicide at least once.

MEASURES: Overall 29 variables (predictors) accounting for psychological behaviors, illegal substances consumption, daily activities at schools and demographic backgrounds were considered.

ANALYSIS: A library of machine learning algorithms along with the traditionally-used logistic regression were used to model and predict suicide attempt risk. Model performances-goodness-of-fit and predictive accuracy-were measured using accuracy, precision, recall and F-score metrics. Additionally, χ2 analysis was used to evaluate the statistical significance of each variable.

RESULTS: The non-parametric Bayesian tree ensemble model outperformed all other models, with 80.0% accuracy in goodness-of-fit (F-score: 0.802) and 78.2% in predictive accuracy (F-score: 0.785). Key health-behaviors identified include: being sad/hopeless (p < 0.0001), followed by safety concerns at school (p < 0.0001), physical fighting (p < 0.0001), inhalant usage (p < 0.0001), illegal drugs consumption at school (p < 0.0001), current cigarette usage (p < 0.0001), and having first sex at an early age (below 15 years of age). Additionally, the minority groups (American Indian/Alaska Natives, Hispanics/Latinos) (p < 0.0001), and females (p < 0.0001) are also found to be highly vulnerable to attempting suicides.

CONCLUSION: Significant contribution of this work is understanding the key health-behaviors and health disparities that lead to higher frequency of suicide attempts among adolescents, while accounting for the non-linearity and complex interactions among the outcome and the exposure variables.

FINDINGS provide insights on key health-behaviors that can be viewed as early warning signs/precursors of suicide attempts among adolescents.


Language: en

Keywords

mental health; suicide prevention; health policy; health behaviors; predictive analytics; suicide attempts among adolescents

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