Did you know that suicide is the third leading cause of
death among children, teens and young adults? Every year almost 125,000
children are brought to emergency rooms to receive treatment for injuries
inflicted while attempting suicide. Girls think about and attempt suicide about
twice as often as boys, and tend to attempt suicide by overdosing on drugs or
cutting themselves. Yet boys die by suicide about four times as often girls,
perhaps because they tend to use more lethal methods, such as firearms, hanging,
or jumping from heights. The rates of teen suicide increases by the minute due
to many issues such as family related issues, mood disorders and even bullying;
which needs to be taken into consideration without delay.
There are a variety of reasons as to why teens feel need
to commit or attempt suicide. According to Dr. Robert Wallace from
creators.com, family factors are the most
commonly cited cause; whether there had been a death, or divorce, or
even financial problems, it slowly but surely makes a teens life turn a 180
within a matter of time. Being a teenager to have to deal with those
problems in life is difficult to cope with; yet no teen should feel the need of
having to resort to suicide. They feel as if dying is the only way of coping with
their issue instead of dealing with it while being alive. Having a family
related issue that leaves you in the need of committing suicide branches out
from not just being only you, but to others who have the same problem and think
that they should consider it as well.
Mood disorders is just another term for being bipolar and
not only is it a symptom leading to depression, but it’s also a risk factor leading
teens into attempting suicide. Mood disorders are reported to be the most
common psychiatric illnesses in children and adolescents who attempt or commit
suicide. Us teens may say that being bipolar is a normal disorder any teen will
come across, but it’s not, it’s a condition that hints out to others that
surround the teen to show that they are dealing with a certain crisis. It’s a
silent universal sign from them that something is wrong and needed to be said
in words rather than kept in their mind. Knowing that mood disorders is a common
sign within teens who consider suicide, it shows that people everywhere need to
take serious note of the symptom and contribute into preventing those who
aren’t or are affected.
Being bullied doesn’t just give a student a hard time in
focusing in school or at home, but majorly affects their intuition on living.
Back in September, 12 year-old Rebecca Sedwick committed suicide due to
bullying; both verbal-bullying and cyber-bullying. Being the personal punching
bag on a bully brings out insecurities in one that can slowly be less tolerable
than before; which what probably happened to Sedwick. Bullying is one of the vilest
thing a person could do to one, and not caring about their life sentence;
whether considering suicide or not; just brings it to an all-time low. Knowing
that bullying causes some teens death, or if not more, doesn’t matter, what
matters is the fact that their willing to put their life at risk without even
completing at least 25% of their life span to explore other options that the
world had to offer; only because they cut themselves short by someone who hadn’t
given them an ounce of care to feel empathetic because their too pathetic themselves
to even care.
Teen suicide is an issue that needs to be taken underway
without delay so we can stop the increasing population if it. It’s the third
leading cause of death among young adults, resulting in 4,400 deaths each year.
And if it’s just the third leading cause, what is it going to take for us to
make a change? Wait until it reaches the top of the scale and moving to the
first leading cause? There are different ways to approach the issue to slowly
solve it, whether it’s to build and spread more common hotlines within the
nation, or setting up multiple classes within a state for teens to push themselves
or be pushed to join and get help. But it’s up to us as bystanders to take an
action and make the first move. That way the common causes, family factors,
mood disorders, and bullying, would be dead to the world. And the only way to
close off the issue is to take it one step at a time slowly but surely to
lessen the suicides each year.
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