4.5 Article

Adverse childhood experiences and suicidality: school connectedness as a protective factor for ethnic minority adolescents

Journal

CHILDREN AND YOUTH SERVICES REVIEW
Volume 120, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.childyouth.2020.105637

Keywords

Adolescent; Immigrant; Suicide; Adverse childhood experiences; Latino American; Somali; Hmong

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The study highlights the impact of ACEs on suicidal ideation and attempts, with school connectedness potentially serving as a protective factor. Further research is needed to identify factors that can moderate the effects of ACEs among adolescents of diverse ethnic backgrounds.
Background: Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) increase risk for suicidality. School connectedness can be protective, whether it buffers the negative effects of ACEs across ethnic backgrounds is understudied. Method: Data came from the 2016 Minnesota Student Survey. The analytic sample included Latino (n = 11,888), Somali (n = 2,302), Hmong (n = 3,503), and non-Hispanic (NH) White (n = 10,968) adolescents. Multivariable logistic regression models, stratified by ethnicity and sex, examined associations between ACEs, school connectedness, and suicide ideation and attempts. Results: More than 40% of students reported >= 1 ACE. Significant differences in suicidality across ethnicity and sex were noted, with Latinas reporting the highest rates and Somali boys and girls reporting some of the lowest. The likelihood of suicidality was significantly higher with each additional ACE (OR range 1.70-2.23), regardless of ethnicity or sex. School connectedness was generally protective against suicidal ideation; e.g., for each unit of school connectedness, the odds of ideation were 29% lower for Latinas (OR = 0.71; 95%, CI: 0.62, 0.80). However, it only buffered the impact of ACEs on suicidality for NH White adolescents. Discussion: Suicide prevention programs should be designed through an intersectional framework and be adapted and relevant to promote social connectedness to increase access to tangible, emotional social support for youth of diverse ethnic backgrounds. Findings suggest further studies are needed to identify factors that moderate the impact of ACEs for all adolescents.

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