Last week I received an email from Martin Cocker, a friend and colleague who runs the Netsafe organization in New Zealand. Netsafe is a one-stop shop for all things related to online safety. If you are a New Zealander who is being mistreated online, or work with someone who is, Netsafe can help. Last year I spoke at their “Confronting Online Harm Together” conference in Auckland. Suffice it to say, Netsafe and their affiliates do great work in this space and we are happy to work alongside them in their efforts.
The email included a question about our research on the connection between bullying and suicide. Regular readers of this blog will know that we explore that issue fairly often, both empirically and editorially. Martin mentioned that there was a quote circulating in New Zealand that was attributed to me saying that “One in five young people that have been bullied will have suicidal ideation.” I don’t remember saying or writing this, but we do have some data that can shed some light on whether it is accurate.
The Complicated Connection Between Bullying and Suicide
First of all, it is actually not uncommon for adolescents to think about suicide. If you take a representative sample of all students in the U.S., irrespective of whether they had been bullied, about 18% report experiencing suicidal ideation (they have seriously considered attempting suicide during the past 12 months). This number comes from the national Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance System from the Centers of Disease Control. We found roughly that same rate among all of the students in our 2010 (20%) and 2016 (16.1%) studies. When we look more closely at our 2016 data, however, we can see that students who are bullied are significantly more likely to report suicidal ideation (see Table below).
So my quote, whether I provided it or not, turns out to be accurate. About 20% of students who have been bullied report suicidal thoughts. This number is not all that different from the rate of suicidal ideation among the general population of adolescents (16%), but much different from students who had never been bullied (4%). Not surprisingly, those students who were bullied both at school and online reported the highest rate of suicidal ideation (32%).
Other Published Research on Bullying and Suicide
There has actually been quite a bit of research exploring the relationship between bullying and suicide. In general, most studies do find a connection. In a review of 37 different studies published in academic journals prior to 2008, Kim and Leventhal found that “most of these studies reported positive associations between all bullying types and suicidal risks” (p. 149). In our paper published in 2010, for example, we found that middle-school students who were bullied or cyberbullied were nearly twice as likely to also report that they had attempted suicide.
Even though most studies find a correlation between bullying and suicide, many suffer from methodological limitations that reduce our confidence in the nature of the connection. Most notably they analyze data collected at one point in time (e.g., “cross-sectional data”). As a result, it is not possible to know if the bullying happened before a student thought about–or attempted–suicide, a key criterion in determining causality. Additionally, many studies fail to control for other factors known to be related to suicide (namely, depression or pre-existing mental disorders). Despite these limitations, I’m not aware of any published study that has found no association between bullying and suicide (or an inverse relationship: those who are bullied are less likely to consider suicide). So while the connection is complicated, it is there.
By the way, we are currently putting the finishing touches on yet another academic article that explores the bullying-suicide link. Like our other studies, we only collected data at one point in time so we still aren’t able to say with any certainty that “experience with bullying causes one to consider or commit suicide.” But it does add one more empirical study (particularly focusing on more serious forms of bullying) on top of the others showing a correlation between experience with bullying and suicide . So stay tuned for more information on that!
Image: Troy Benson (Flickr)
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