Department of Psychology, University of Ghana, P.O. Box LG 84, Accra, Ghana.
Department of Psychology, University of the Free State, Bloemfontein, South Africa.
BMC Psychiatry. 2023 Mar 15;23(1):169. doi: 10.1186/s12888-023-04646-7.
While adolescent suicidal behaviour (ideation, planning, and attempt) remains a global public health concern, available county-specific evidence on the phenomenon from African countries is relatively less than enough. The present study was conducted to estimate the 12-month prevalence and describe some of the associated factors of suicide behaviour among school-going adolescents aged 12-17 years old in Namibia.
Participants (n = 4531) answered a self-administered anonymous questionnaire developed and validated for the nationally representative Namibia World Health Organization Global School-based Student Health Survey conducted in 2013. We applied univariate, bivariable, and multivariable statistical approaches to the data.
Of the 3,152 analytical sample, 20.2% (95% confidence interval [CI]: 18.3-22.2%) reported suicidal ideation, 25.2% (95% CI: 22.3-28.4%) engaged in suicide planning, and 24.5% (95% CI: 20.9-28.6%) attempted suicide during the previous 12 months. Of those who attempted suicide, 14.6% (95% CI: 12.5-16.9%) reported one-time suicide attempt, and 9.9% (95% CI: 8.1-12.1%) attempted suicide at least twice in the previous 12 months. The final adjusted multivariable models showed physical attack victimisation, bullying victimisation, loneliness, and parental intrusion of privacy as key factors associated with increased likelihood of suicidal ideation, planning, one-time suicide attempt, and repeated attempted suicide. Cannabis use showed the strongest association with increased relative risk of repeated attempted suicide.
The evidence highlights the importance of paying more attention to addressing the mental health needs (including those related to psychological and social wellness) of school-going adolescents in Namibia. While the current study suggests that further research is warranted to explicate the pathways to adolescent suicide in Namibia, identifying and understanding the correlates (at the individual-level, family-level, interpersonal-level, school context and the broader community context) of adolescent suicidal ideations and non-fatal suicidal behaviours are useful for intervention and prevention programmes.
尽管青少年自杀行为(意念、计划和尝试)仍然是全球公共卫生关注的问题,但来自非洲国家的具体情况证据相对较少。本研究旨在估计纳米比亚 12-17 岁在校青少年自杀行为的 12 个月患病率,并描述一些相关因素。
参与者(n=4531)回答了一份自我管理的匿名问卷,该问卷是为 2013 年进行的全国代表性纳米比亚世界卫生组织全球学校学生健康调查而制定和验证的。我们对数据应用了单变量、双变量和多变量统计方法。
在 3152 名分析样本中,20.2%(95%置信区间[CI]:18.3-22.2%)报告有自杀意念,25.2%(95% CI:22.3-28.4%)有自杀计划,24.5%(95% CI:20.9-28.6%)在过去 12 个月内尝试过自杀。在那些尝试自杀的人中,14.6%(95% CI:12.5-16.9%)报告有一次性自杀企图,9.9%(95% CI:8.1-12.1%)在过去 12 个月内至少有两次自杀企图。最终的调整后的多变量模型表明,身体攻击受害、欺凌受害、孤独和父母侵犯隐私是与自杀意念、计划、一次性自杀企图和重复自杀企图的可能性增加相关的关键因素。大麻使用与重复自杀企图的相对风险增加呈最强关联。
这些证据强调了更加关注满足纳米比亚在校青少年心理健康需求(包括与心理和社会健康相关的需求)的重要性。虽然目前的研究表明,有必要进一步研究阐明纳米比亚青少年自杀的途径,但确定和理解青少年自杀意念和非致命性自杀行为的相关性(在个人层面、家庭层面、人际层面、学校环境和更广泛的社区环境)对于干预和预防计划是有用的。