TY - JOUR PY - 2023// TI - Impact of parental mental health and help-seeking on adolescents' suicidal ideations and help-seeking behaviors JO - International journal of environmental research and public health A1 - Han, Jaehyun A1 - Ahn, Joung-Sook A1 - Kim, Min-Hyuk A1 - Chang, Sei-Jin A1 - Kim, Jong-Koo A1 - Min, Seongho SP - e6538 EP - e6538 VL - 20 IS - 15 N2 - This study aimed to evaluate the impact of parental mental health on adolescent offspring. Data regarding 6512 families from the 2010-2021 Korean National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey were analyzed; among them, 428 were placed in the suicidal ideation (SI) group and 421 were placed in the matched control (MC) group. This number was selected for the use of the propensity score matching method. The findings highlighted significant associations between parental mental health and adolescent suicidal ideation, with mothers in the SI group having higher odds of Diagnosed Depression (OR 2.109, 1.023-4.350 95% CI), Depressive Mood (OR 2.155, 1.224-3.793 95% CI), and Suicidal Ideation (OR 2.532, 1.322-4.851 95% CI) compared to the MC group. Regarding the fathers, paternal Suicidal Ideation (OR 4.295, 1.747-10.599 95% CI) was the only significant factor for adolescent suicidal ideation. In contrast, maternal depressive symptoms and help-seeking behavior significantly impacted adolescent help-seeking; Maternal Depressive Mood increased with adolescent Help-Seeking (OR 4.486, 1.312-15.340 95% CI) while Maternal Suicidal Ideation reduced the probability of Help-Seeking in the SI group (OR 0.15, 0.031-0.721, 95% CI). Chronic and severe depressive symptoms in mothers could make adolescents less likely to seek help for their suicidal ideations. Therefore, clinicians working with adolescents should prioritize a family-oriented approach.
Language: en
LA - en SN - 1661-7827 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20156538 ID - ref1 ER -