ResearchPublications

National trends and disparities in bullying and suicidal behavior across demographic subgroups of US adolescents
Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Suicidal behavior and bullying victimization are important indicators of adolescent psychological distress, and are patterned by sex, race/ethnicity and sexual identity. This study aimed to estimate trends and disparities in these factors along key demographics.

METHOD: Youth Risk Behavior Survey data (2015-2019, N=44,066) were collected biennially through national cross-sectional surveys of US school-attending adolescents. Survey-weighted logistic regressions examined disparities in past-year bullying and suicidal behavior, overall and by demographics.

RESULTS: Bullying in 2019 was highest for female (vs. male) students (OR=1.82, 95% CI:[1.62, 2.06]), American Indian/Alaskan Native (vs White) students (OR= 1.48, [0.91, 2.41], p>.05), and gay/lesbian (vs heterosexual) students (OR= 2.81, [2.07, 3.81]). Suicidal behavior disparities affected similar groups. There was minimal evidence for shifts in disparities since 2015, with the exception of bullying for gay/lesbian adolescents. The prevalence of bullying victimization among gay and lesbian adolescents went from 31.6% to 44.5% between 2015 and 2019, surpassing the bisexual and “Not Sure” groups to be the sexual identity group with the highest rate of bullying victimization.

CONCLUSION: Interventions that operate on multiple structural levels and empower marginalized youth are needed.

Full citation:
Kreski NT, Chen Q, Olfson M, Cerda M, Martins SS, Mauro PM, Hasin DS, Keyes KM (2022).
National trends and disparities in bullying and suicidal behavior across demographic subgroups of US adolescents
Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, 61 (12), 1435-1444. doi: 10.1016/j.jaac.2022.04.011.