Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t7fkt Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-20T07:16:50.975Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Young migrant mental health difficulties and suicidal behaviours: an alternative perspective

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 May 2019

Theodore A. Petti*
Affiliation:
Professor of Psychiatry, Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, USA
Andrew Chen
Affiliation:
Resident in Psychiatry, Stony Brook University Hospital, USA
*
Correspondence: Theodore A. Petti, 671 Hoes Lane West, Piscataway, NJ 08854, USA. Email: [email protected]
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Summary

The Saving and Empowering Young Lives in Europe (SEYLE) study brings attention to the special needs of adolescent migrants. Alternative data analyses could lead to improved service delivery and requisite education/training of health and mental health personnel. We advocate earlier identification by using SEYLE data to shape policy about youth suicidal behaviour and ideation in prevention efforts.

Type
Editorial
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BYCreative Common License - NCCreative Common License - ND
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is unaltered and is properly cited. The written permission of Cambridge University Press must be obtained for commercial re-use or in order to create a derivative work.
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal College of Psychiatrists 2019

The impact of migrants across Great Britain and Europe has generated considerable attention within the European Union but there has been little consideration about the fate of migrant youth. McMahon and associatesReference McMahon, Corcoran, Keeley, Cannon, Carli and Wasserman1 report, from the larger Saving and Empowering Young Lives in Europe (SEYLE) study, on prevalence comparisons of adolescent migrants and non-migrants on critical mental health factors, particularly suicidal ideation and attempts. They employed the psychometrically validated Strength and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ)Reference Goodman2 in a school-based survey that was completed by over 1100 European Union migrant and non-migrant adolescents from ten diverse European Union countries.

The study found 386 (3.6%) of the adolescents reported a previous suicide attempt and that first-generation migrants reported an elevated prevalence of suicide attempts and significantly higher levels of peer difficulties compared with non-migrants. The prevalence of suicide attempts in non-migrants (3.1%) and second-generation European migrant (3.1%) groups was significantly lower than for first-generation European (6.9%), first-generation non-European (9%) and second-generation non-European (7.1%) migrants. Likewise, the prevalence of serious suicidal ideation was significantly lower for non-migrants (3.2%) and second-generation European migrants (3.4%) compared with first-generation European migrants (5.7%), non-European first-generation (6.7%) and non-European second-generation migrants (9.6%). In addition, the highest levels of conduct and hyperactivity problems were found among migrants of non-European origin. Based upon their findings, school-based support and appropriate mental health services are required to meet the complex needs of migrant adolescents.

However, by limiting data analysis to the effects of migrant generation and region of origin, McMahon and associatesReference McMahon, Corcoran, Keeley, Cannon, Carli and Wasserman1 forfeit the opportunity to fully build on the wealth of collected data to better deliver effective suicide prevention for adolescent migrants. For example, identification of greater peer problems as the only difference between non-migrant and both first-generation European and non-European migrant groups on the SDQ may explain the significant disparity in suicide attempts and serious suicidal ideation between groups and serve as a high-risk factor. The SEYLE study obtained but did not examine the following factors in relation to suicide attempts and suicide ideation: depression, hyperactivity, bullying, peer relations and non-suicidal self-injury – the latter was only briefly noted in the paper but not considered. There are data to support that these factors play an important role in the outcomes under study and they may be better for helping shape efforts for prevention and future research than the more global and clearly necessary recommendations by the European Society of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry.Reference McMahon, Corcoran, Keeley, Cannon, Carli and Wasserman1,Reference Anagnostopoulos, Heberbrand, Eliez, Doyle, Klasen and Crommen3 The SEYLE study provides sufficient data for further analyses to identify critical risk factors to inform policy development and implement preventive programmes.

The following discussion considers the rationale for the more focused use of the SEYLE data to broaden public health interventions for suicide prevention in a highly vulnerable population. Suicide and suicidal ideation are often associated with depression, hopelessness and anxiety.Reference Ori, Galera, Turecki, Forte, Renaud and Tremblay4Reference Joiner and Rudd6 Psychomotor agitation and irritability are criteria for major depression in adolescents.7 Depression – although neither delineated in the report nor an SDQ item – is represented in the SDQReference Goodman2 emotional problems scale as ‘often unhappy, downhearted’, as agitation in the hyperactivity scale, and irritability as temper tantrums as possible proxy in the conduct disorder scale. Moreover, greater levels of hyperactivity strongly suggest the presence of attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), with its associated propensity to risk-taking behaviour that can predispose an individual to migrate to a completely different culture and increase the risk of depression.Reference Lehti, Chudal, Suominen, Gissler and Sourander8 ADHD is also a significant risk factor for suicidal behaviour.Reference Ljung, Chen, Lichtenstein and Larsson9,Reference Dalsgaard, Ostergaard, Leckman, Mortensen and Pedersen10 The highest levels of hyperactivity and conduct problems reported for migrants of non-European origin suggests a high yield factor for future prevention screening.

More directly, the significantly higher levels of peer difficulties for all migrant adolescents should be included in any factor analysis of suicide risk factors. Although non-suicidal self-injury (NSSI) is noted in the study introductionReference McMahon, Corcoran, Keeley, Cannon, Carli and Wasserman1 to be associated with a migration history and suicide attempts, the study failed to examine this known high-risk variable for suicide.Reference Muehlenkamp and Nock)5,Reference Ribeiro, Franklin, Fox, Bentley, Kleiman and Chang11 The interpersonal–psychological theory (IPT) modelReference Kene, Brabeck, Kelly and DiCicco12,Reference Joiner, Ribeiro and Silva13 seems to fit the migrant experience and study findings. Suicide in IPT is posited to result from a combination of feeling that one does not belong or is a burden on others – common phenomena for migrant youths – when accompanied by a sense of not fearing pain or death. To complete a lethal suicidal attempt, the IPT model requires that the person overcome the fear of pain, injury and death that are associated with suicidal behaviour. NSSI can increase acquired capability for suicide by a process of desensitisation to pain and thus should be considered a priority in any screening effortsReference Muehlenkamp and Nock)5,Reference Selby, Joiner, Ribeiro and Nock14 as a significant suicide risk factor in any prevention efforts. Trauma in the migratory process itself may provide the habituation to pain and acquired suicide capacity.Reference Kene, Brabeck, Kelly and DiCicco12 The process of problematic acculturation in young migrants may lead to perceptions of thwarted belongingness from valued social groups such as neighbours and community, which in turn predisposes them to negative emotions towards the self and passive suicidal ideation.

Peer relations are a critical component of adolescent socialisation and development. Problems in establishing meaningful peer relations, as noted for first-generation and second-generation non-European migrant groups, are a clear risk factor for suicidal ideation, attempts and suicide. ‘Rather solitary, tends to play alone’ is the first item in the SDQ peer problem scale and being bullied is the fourth item. They relate to not belonging or thwarted belongingness in IPT. Bullying represents a multifaceted form of trauma that is often experienced by migrant youth as children and adolescents, especially those of different ethnicity and culture. Such trauma often begins in the country of origin.Reference Srabstein15 Being bullied or abused can result in a sense of learned helplessness and feelings of being thwarted and not belonging. It also increases the probability of elevated anxiety, depression and numerous other psychiatric symptoms into young adulthood, predisposing migrants to suicidal ideation.Reference Kene, Brabeck, Kelly and DiCicco12,Reference Srabstein15Reference Teicher18 Thus, most adolescent migrants and their families are beset with the stress of acclimation and acculturalisation within a frequently hostile environment, while their dreams of a better life are attacked from all quarters, including from within the family.Reference Rothe, Tzuang and Pumariega19

Accordingly, the SEYLE study reports the second-generation, non-European migrant group as having the highest prevalence of suicidal ideation. The colour of their skin, religion they practice and limited access to appropriate services may have served as barriers to effective integration into society,Reference McMahon, Corcoran, Keeley, Cannon, Carli and Wasserman1 but lack of appropriate education and training of vulnerable migrant adolescents and emerging adults and those of the professionals offering them care may be more critical in light of the IPT model of suicide with regard to feeling thwarted in their desires and efforts to be a part of society. These factors affect the first-generation adolescent migrants and, as the SEYLE study demonstrates, will most severely affect the second generation of non-European adolescent migrants with surges of reported discrimination and xenophobia. The possibility that migrant adolescents feel thwarted and isolated from society needs to be considered in any public health responses to a world that is witnessing high rates of displacement within many countries.

Likewise, McMahon and associates note that post-migration factors in non-European migrants may be more important than the migratory experience as mediators of suicide risk and behavioural difficulties.Reference McMahon, Corcoran, Keeley, Cannon, Carli and Wasserman1 They recommend evidence-based universal mental health promotion programmes with demonstrated effectiveness delivered in all schools and to address perceived deficits in healthcare delivery; these recommendations certainly need implementation but may not address the most vulnerable adolescent migrants at risk for suicide, i.e. those who do not have access to schools, who are not regularly attending school due to a psychiatric illness, who are dropping out to financially support the family or who fear bullying and related factors. Their recommendation does not include the need to screen for psychiatric illness. Many migrant families have struggled to accommodate to the inherent stresses of immigration. The need to systemically address the personal needs of individual first-generation adolescent migrants and second-generation non-European migrants at risk for suicidal ideation, NSSI and suicide attempts will not be easily attained,Reference Giacco, Matanov and Priebe20 but arguably should begin with screening efforts.

Early identification of those enrolled in school who are struggling, disruptive or truant and those presenting with delinquency should be given priority in screening for NSSI and suicidal risk factors, including screening for bullying. Screening tools with reasonable reliability and validity are available for such selective screening, e.g. the Columbia-Suicide Severity Rating Scale (C-SSRS)Reference Posner, Brown, Stanley, Brent, Yershova and Oquendo21 or any one of several scales to screen for ADHD, anxiety or depression. A history of NSSI should be considered a high-risk factor for suicidal behaviour as especially should a prior suicide attemptReference Muehlenkamp and Nock)5 or both.Reference Brausch, Williams and Cox22 Another option is to construct a template from items in the SDQ or related scale that are highly correlated with prior suicide attempts or suicidal ideation, as would be possible from the SEYLE data-set.

Interventions in schools and training programmes for professionals to identify and treat vulnerable children should be pursued as McMahon and associates suggest. Better systematic early identification of migrant youth is paramount for those most at risk for suicidal behaviour. The SEYLE study results with additional data analysis and addition of NSSI items can serve as a useful guide for this purpose. Evidence-based treatments are becoming more readily available but beyond this editorial's scope. Further systematic research must be pursued and funded to explain the SEYLE results and, as efforts continue, to improve access to social support and healthcare for at-risk migrant youth.Reference Chau, Kabuth and Chau23

In conclusion, the SEYLE study delineates critical stressors and issues concerning adolescent migrantsReference McMahon, Corcoran, Keeley, Cannon, Carli and Wasserman1 and appropriately focuses upon behavioural and suicidal outcomes. This editorial perspective elaborates more directly on suicide-related factors and the need to focus more directly upon the youth at greatest risk in light of relevant theories of suicide and NSSI. The same recommendations made by Lustig and associatesReference Lustig, Kia-Keating, Knight, Geltman, Ellis and Kinzie24 hold today, especially in light of insights provided by SEYLE: interventions that address cultural relevancy and efficacy that impact on multiple aetiological levels. Early identification through monitoring risk factors is essential for effective suicide prevention in vulnerable migrant populations.

Footnotes

Declaration of interest: None.

References

1McMahon, EM, Corcoran, P, Keeley, H, Cannon, M, Carli, V, Wasserman, C, et al. Mental health difficulties and suicidal behaviors among young migrants: multicenter study of European adolescents. BJP Open 2017; 3: 291–9.Google Scholar
2Goodman, R. Psychometric properties of the strength and difficulties questionnaire. J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry 2001; 40: 1337–45.Google Scholar
3Anagnostopoulos, DC, Heberbrand, J, Eliez, S, Doyle, MB, Klasen, H, Crommen, S, et al. European Society of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry: position statement on mental health of child and adolescent refugees. Eur Child Adolesc Psychiatry 2016; 25: 673–6.Google Scholar
4Ori, M, Galera, C, Turecki, G, Forte, A, Renaud, J, Tremblay, RE, et al. Association of childhood irritability and depressive/anxious mood profiles with adolescent suicidal ideation and attempts. JAMA Psychiatry 2018; 75: 465–73.Google Scholar
5Muehlenkamp, JJ. Distinguishing between suicidal and nonsuicidal self-injury. In The Oxford Handbook of Suicide and Self-Injury (ed Nock), MK: 2346. Oxford University Press, 2014.Google Scholar
6.Joiner, TE, Rudd, MD. Disentangling the interrelations between hopelessness, loneliness, and suicidal ideation. Suicide and Life-Threatening Behav 1996; 26: 1926.Google Scholar
7American Psychiatric Association. Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (5th edn). American Psychiatric Publishing Inc, 2013.Google Scholar
8Lehti, V, Chudal, R, Suominen, A, Gissler, M, Sourander, A. Association between immigrant background and ADHD: a nationwide population-based case-control study. J Child Psychology Psychiatry 2016; 57: 967–75.Google Scholar
9Ljung, T, Chen, Q, Lichtenstein, P, Larsson, H. Common etiological factors of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder and suicidal behavior: a population-based study in Sweden. JAMA Psychiatry 2014; 71: 958–64.Google Scholar
10Dalsgaard, S, Ostergaard, SD, Leckman, JF, Mortensen, PB, Pedersen, MG. Mortality in children, adolescents, and adults with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder: a nationwide cohort study. Lancet 2015; 385: 2190–6.Google Scholar
11Ribeiro, JD, Franklin, JC, Fox, KR, Bentley, KH, Kleiman, EM, Chang, BP, et al. Self-injurious thoughts and behaviors as risk factors for future suicide ideation, attempts, and death: a meta-analysis of longitudinal studies. Psychol Med 2016; 46: 225–36.Google Scholar
12Kene, P, Brabeck, KM, Kelly, C, DiCicco, B. Suicidality among immigrants: application of the interpersonal-psychological theory. Death Studies 2016; 40: 373–82.Google Scholar
13Joiner, TE, Ribeiro, JD, Silva, C. Nonsuicidal self-injury, suicidal behavior, and their co-occurrence as viewed through the lens of the interpersonal theory of suicide. Curr Dir Psychol Sci 2012; 21: 342–7.Google Scholar
14Selby, EA, Joiner, TE Jr, Ribeiro, JD. Comprehensive theories of suicidal behavior. In Oxford library of psychology. The Oxford handbook of suicide and self-injury (ed Nock, MK): 286307. Oxford University Press, 2014.Google Scholar
15Srabstein, JC. The global implications of bullying and other forms of maltreatment, in the context of migratory trends and psychiatric resources. Child Adolesc Psychiatr Clin N Am 2015; 24: 799810.Google Scholar
16Hertz, MF, Donato, I, Wright, J. Bullying and suicide: a public health approach. J Adolesc Health 2013; 53: S1S3.Google Scholar
17Klomek, AB, Kelinman, M, Altschuler, E, Marrocco, F, Amakawa, L, Gould, MS. High school bullying as a risk for later depression and suicidality. Suicide Life Threat Behav 2011; 41: 501–16.Google Scholar
18Teicher, MH. Hurtful words: association of exposure to peer verbal abuse with elevated psychiatric symptom scores and corpus callosum abnormalities. Am J Psychiatry 2010; 167: 1464–71.Google Scholar
19Rothe, EM, Tzuang, D, Pumariega, AJ. Acculturation, development, and adaptation. Child Adolesc Psychiatr Clin N Am 2010; 19: 681–96.Google Scholar
20Giacco, D, Matanov, A, Priebe, S. Providing mental healthcare to immigrants: current challenges and new strategies. Curr Opin Psychiatry 2014; 27: 282–8.Google Scholar
21Posner, K, Brown, GK, Stanley, B, Brent, DA, Yershova, KV, Oquendo, MA, et al. The Columbia-Suicide Severity Rating Scale: initial validity and internal consistency findings from three multisite studies with adolescents and adults. Am J Psychiatry 2011; 168: 1266–77.Google Scholar
22Brausch, AM, Williams, AG, Cox, EM. Examining intent to die and methods for nonsuicidal self-injury and suicide attempts. Suicide Life-Threatening Behav 2016; 46: 737–44.Google Scholar
23Chau, K, Kabuth, B, Chau, N. Association between suicide ideation and attempts and being an immigrant among adolescent, and the role of socioeconomic factors and school behavior, and related health difficulties. Int J Environ Res Public Health 2016; 13: 1070.Google Scholar
24Lustig, SL, Kia-Keating, M, Knight, WG, Geltman, P, Ellis, H, Kinzie, JD, et al. Review of child and adolescent refugee mental health. J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry 2004; 43: 2436.Google Scholar
Submit a response

eLetters

No eLetters have been published for this article.