Indicator 9: Youth Suicide Attempts

Why This Is Important
Suicide is a leading cause of death among Maine youth ages 15-24 ; approximately 25 to 30
young people commit suicide in Maine each year. For every youth suicide, there are an
estimated 20 suicide attempts. Although there is no typical profile of a suicidal youth, youth
most at risk struggle with emotional or behavioral difficulties such as depression, conduct
disorders, substance abuse, and ultra-perfectionistic or rigid behavior patterns. Suicide
attempts indicate increased risk for suicide completion, as well as other severe behavioral
health problems in the population.


Where We Stand
The Maine Youth Risk Behavior Survey (YRBS) in 2005 found that about 6% of
Maine youth in grades 9-12 reported making at least one suicide attempt in the previous year, which is a notably decline from previous years. The percentage who reported considering
suicide dropped considerably from previous years, as did the percentage who made a plan for how they would kill themselves, in addition, those who had medical treatment for a condition resulting from a suicide attempt dropped slightly. While nearly the same percentage of males and females reporting making a suicide plan and actually having attempted suicide, girls were more likely to have sustained an injury that needed medical treatment (3% versus 1%).
Data Sources and Context
This information comes from the Maine Youth Risk Behavior Survey (YRBS), Maine Department
of Education. The data source is the Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance System maintained by the
U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Data from the Maine YRBS is available
on-line at http://www.mainecshp.com/survey.html. National YRBS figures can be found at http://www.cdc.gov/nccdphp/dash/yrbs. National YRBS data will be available for 2005 in Summer 2006.
*Important Note: YRBS data is gathered every two years using a questionnaire administered to
a sample of students in Maine and nationally. When the Maine YRBS survey has an overall
response rate of 60% or higher, the CDC statistically weights the results so that the numbers can
be generalized to all public school students in the state in grades 9-12. When the overall response
rate is below 60%, the CDC does not perform such statistical weighting, and the data apply only to
the students who actually filled out the questionnaires. Maine’s YRBS data for 1993 and 1999 was unweighted, so information from those years cannot be compared reliably with data from 1995,
1997, 2001, 2003 and 2005.