Youth are presenting to Emergency Departments (EDs) following a suicide-related crisis at higher rates and younger ages. Clinicians lack tools to effectively discern suicide risk in younger patients. The present investigation examines how ED-based, suicidal pre-adolescents and adolescents conceptualize death. One hundred and sixty-seven suicidal pre-adolescents and adolescents (10-17 years; M = 12, SD = 1.4) presenting to a psychiatric ED with a suicide-related chief complaint completed assessments of suicidal ideation (SI; passive and active thoughts), suicide attempt (SA), depressive symptoms, and death conceptualizations (Death Avoidance, Escape Acceptance, Neutral Acceptance). Post-discharge SI and SA were assessed via survey emailed to participants 6 months later and via electronic medical record. At baseline, lower levels of Death Avoidance and higher levels of Escape Acceptance were most robustly associated with active SI. Pre-adolescents reported higher levels of Death Avoidance and lower levels of Escape Acceptance than adolescents at baseline. Death conceptualizations did not predict follow-up SI and SA. Youth who have recently experienced a suicide-related crisis are more likely to accept death as an escape from painand spend less time avoiding thoughts about death. This profile appears to be more representative of adolescents, relativeto pre-adolescents who display the opposite pattern.
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Katherine M. Tezanos
Antonio Simeone
Ruth Gerson
Child Psychiatry & Human Development
Columbia University
Yale University
New York University
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Tezanos et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69df2b49e4eeef8a2a6b030f — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10578-026-02006-6
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