4.5 Article

Mental health problems and suicidal behavior from adolescence to young adulthood in college: linking two population-based studies

Journal

EUROPEAN CHILD & ADOLESCENT PSYCHIATRY
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00787-023-02167-y

Keywords

Epidemiology; Prospective; Mental health; Deliberate self-harm; Suicide

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This study reveals that mental health problems in adolescence tend to persist into young adulthood, impacting long-term mental well-being. The findings show that internalizing and externalizing problems in adolescence significantly increase the risk of developing mental disorders six years later, while self-harm in adolescence increases the risk of suicidal thoughts. The results highlight the significance of early identification and timely interventions to reduce the prevalence and impact of mental health problems and suicidality.
It is well established that mental health problems are highly recurrent and persistent from childhood to adolescence, but less is known to what extent mental health problems also persist from adolescence into young adulthood. The aim of the current study was therefore to examine the chronicity and risk of mental health problems and suicidality from adolescence to young adulthood. Data stem from two Norwegian population-based studies conducted 6 years apart; the youth@hordaland study from 2012 (age 16-19) and the SHoT2018 study (age 22-25). These two data sources were linked to produce a longitudinal sample of 1257 individuals. A wide range of self-reported mental health and suicidality instruments (used both continuously and categorically) were analyzed using log-link binomial regression analysis, adjusting for age, sex, parental education, and financial problems. We found that high levels of mental health problems in late adolescence were a significant risk factor for reporting poor mental health 6 years later. Internalizing and externalizing problems in adolescence were associated with a 2.8-fold and 1.9-fold increased risk, respectively, of reporting a mental disorder 6 years later. Similarly, self-harm in adolescence was associated with a 2.1-fold increased risk of suicidal thoughts 6 years later. The magnitudes of the adjusted risk ratios were generally similar across the various mental health and suicidality measures used at the two assessment points. Adjustment for confounders did not, or only slightly, attenuate the risk ratios, and all associations remained statistically significant in the adjusted analyses. This longitudinal study provides new evidence of the chronicity of mental health problems and suicidality from adolescence to adulthood in Norway. The results emphasize the importance of early identification and timely interventions to reduce the prevalence and impact of mental health problems and suicidality.

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