TY - JOUR PY - 2024// TI - Trends in suicidality and bullying among New York City adolescents across race and sexual identity: 2009-2019 JO - Journal of urban health A1 - English, Devin A1 - Kelman, Elizabeth A1 - Lundy De La Cruz, Nneka A1 - Thompson, Azure B. A1 - Le, Karolyn A1 - Garretson, Marné A1 - Viswanath, Aishwarya L. A1 - Brahmbhatt, Diksha A1 - Lockwood, Cynthia A1 - Busby, Danielle R. A1 - Davila, Marivel SP - ePub EP - ePub VL - ePub IS - ePub N2 - Despite evidence showing rising suicidality among lesbian, gay, and bisexual (LGB) and Black adolescents, separately, there is scant research on suicide risk trajectories among youth groups across both racial and sexual identities. Thus, we examined trajectories of self-reported suicidal ideation and attempt and their associations with bullying among New York City-based adolescents. We analyzed 2009-2019 NYC Youth Risk Behavior Survey data. We ran weighted descriptive and logistic regression analyses to test for trends in dichotomous suicidal ideation, suicide attempt, bullying at school, and e-bullying variables among students across both race/ethnicity and sexual identity. We assessed associations between suicidality trends and bullying with logistic regressions. Models controlled for age and sex. Suicidal ideation and attempt were 2 and 5 times more likely among LGB than heterosexual participants, respectively. Bullying at school and e-bullying were 2 times more likely among LGB than heterosexual participants. Black LGB participants were the only LGB group for which both suicidal ideation (AOR = 1.04, SE = .003, p < .001) and attempt (AOR = 1.04, SE = .004, p < .001) increased over time. Both increased at accelerating rates. Conversely, White LGB participants were the only LGB group for which both suicidal ideation (AOR = 0.98, SE = .006, p < .001) and attempt (AOR = 0.92, SE = .008, p < .001) decreased over time. These changes occurred in parallel with significant bullying increases for Black and Latina/o/x LGB adolescents and significant bullying decreases for White LGB adolescents. Bullying was positively associated with suicidal ideation and attempt for all adolescents.

FINDINGS suggest resources aimed at curbing rising adolescent suicide should be focused on Black LGB youth.

Language: en

LA - en SN - 1099-3460 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11524-024-00860-0 ID - ref1 ER -