Teenager suicide facts are: Most teens interviewed after making a suicide attempt say that they did it because they were trying to escape from a situation that seemed impossible to deal with or to get relief from really bad thoughts or feelings.
The mental disorders most frequently suffer by kids comprise main mood depressive disorder, dysthymic disorder, and bipolar disorder. The symptoms of depression include: sadness, lethargy, and disinterest in activities normally enjoyed, self-criticism, pessimism, and opinion of suicide. Depressed kids and youths are frequently irritable and can come out aggressive and hostile.
Earlier attempts, current feelings of suicide, mood disorder and drug or alcohol mistreatment are the most important risk factors for suicide. Some youths, because of their biochemical structure or life experiences, are at greater risk for suicide.
Experience violence, addiction, poverty, and sexual, physical, and/or emotional addiction have a higher risk for teens or youths suicide.
A youth with an enough support of friends, family, religious affiliations, peer groups or additional behavior may have an opening to deal with his or her everyday frustrations. But many teenagers do not feel like they have that, and they feel detached and isolated from family and friends. These youth are at increased risk for suicide.
A traumatic event, which can appear minor, viewed from an adult viewpoint, is enough to push them over the edge into a severe depression.
Teenager drug and alcohol misuse results in higher risk of suicide because of the mind-altering affects of the substances often in combination with the reasons that the teens may have begun experimenting with drugs in the first place.
In conclusion we can describe following Risk factors for suicide:
* Easy access to guns
* Stressful situation or loss
* Pervious suicide attempts
* Depression and/or alcohol or substance abuse
* Exposure to other teenagers who have committed suicide
* Family history of mental disorders, substance abuse, or suicide




