Content area

Abstract

Suggestions that there is a growing epidemic of suicide among college students in the United States are false. The National Survey of Counseling Center Directors reports 1,404 student suicides over a 14-year period and an adjusted suicide rate of 6.5, half the rate of the general US population (12.6 for all races) during this period when matched for gender and age. Counseling centers appear effective in treating suicidal students, for although the suicide rate for students who were currently or previously clients at campus counseling centers is 3 times the rate of other students, student clients have 18 times the risk of suicide compared to students in general. Identifying and referring students at elevated risk for suicide could further reduce the crude and relative rate of student suicide. However, even programs that do this only moderately well may require substantial increases in counseling staffing. [PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]

Details

Title
College Student Suicide in the United States: 1990-1991 Through 2003-2004
Author
Schwartz, Allan J
Pages
341-52
Publication year
2006
Publication date
May/Jun 2006
Publisher
Taylor & Francis Inc.
ISSN
07448481
e-ISSN
19403208
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
213065853
Copyright
Copyright Heldref Publications May/Jun 2006