US Pediatric Suicide in 2021
By Region
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With historical context, changes can be best interpreted. This is very important as many media/pundits/presenters lazily present year-over-year trends as if it can tell the full story. It can't.
Here's the US since 1999:
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Suicide rates during the pandemic are within expected trends, & no increase is significant. The highest increase in the past 21 years was in 2017 for boys and 2004 for girls. The 2021 rate is a record for American girls, but again, well within the trend we would expect.
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We'll now look at things regionally, and start with the HHS region 1 (CT, ME, MA, NH, RI, VT). We can see, that trends are within expected for boys and girls, and these noisy rates bounce quite a bit. (missing values for the girls in earlier years is due to CDC rule)
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HHS Region 2 (NJ, NY are represented only, the CDC data does not include Puerto Rico or US VI) shows that the pandemic period is a relatively lower rate of suicide, with the records and record increases occurring earlier).
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HHS Region 3 (DE, DC, ME, PE, VA, WV) saw records for boys in 2021 (following the previous 15 year trend).
Girls were pretty much on average for the past 8 years.
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HHS Region 4 (AL, FL, GA, KY, MS, NC, SC, TN) had quite a jump for boys, and is the strongest worsening change for boys among the regions, though I wouldn't exactly call it outside of the trend since 2006.
The rate for girls essentially unchanged for 7y.
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On the other hand, Region 5 (IL, IN, MI, MN, OH, WI) has a huge drop for boys overall since 2018, and 2020/2021 really within longstanding trends.
For girls, the "slow steady creep up" continues but neither pandemic year a record.
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HHS region 6 (AR, LA, NM, OK, TX) seems to have a decreasing trend for boys the past few years.
Girls suicide hit an all-time high in 2021 as part of a well established pre-pandemic trend. No "pandemic leaps," but certainly a concerning march.
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HHS region 7 (IA, KS, MO, NE) seems to be on trend for continued increases, but lower than previous years both for girls and boys.
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HHS region 8 (CO, MT, ND, SD, UT, WY) shows no significant suicide rate change in boys during the pandemic relative to the previous 5 years, and girls. In fact, girls on a general trend decrease since 2017.
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HHS Region 9 (only including AZ, CA, HI, NV) has no pandemic effect on boys and an increase for girls, though again it follows trends going back to 2007.
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Finally, we have HHS Region 10, which shows no significant pandemic effect, and the record increases and rates are well before the pandemic for both boys and girls.
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Overall, the changes during 2020/2021 are pretty much exactly what we would expect with random variation. Remember, rates can only go up/down, & most of the time, changes are small.
Comparing to the previous 21 year trend, the majority of pediatric suicide rates are lower.
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Comparing previous 2 years (2018, 2019), 2020&2021 again follow an expected random distribution of rate changes.
Overall, girls up by 3% (95% confidence interval -5% to +13%, non-significant)
Overall, boys down by 3% (95% confidence interval -8% to +3%, non-significant)
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It is possible for p-hacking (NOT WHAT WE DO) to create "significant numbers" in either direction.
Girls:
HHS 1,5,6,10 (13.9M girls represented)
- higher by 20% (6%-35%)
Again, this is unethical stats creating these "significant numbers", and the statistical correction needed would remove all significance.
Boys:
HHS 1, 3, 4 (14.9M boys represented)
- higher by 11% (0%-23%)
HHS 2,5,6,7,8,9,10 (25.3M boys represented)
- fewer by 9% (2%-16%)
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Simply put, there is no evidence of pandemic-related changes to American pediatric suicide rates in 2020 and 2021. If anything, it is exactly on trend.
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✅Reality: Using a large set (n=2mil) of Ontario students, we see more improvements then losses, and trend of older students doing better than younger students.
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As an example of the statistical reason why I can say the above is a myth, zoom in on ALL the grade 3 scores (Grade 3 did the "worst")
Looking at the distribution, we see more deteriorations (52%) than improvements (45% of scores) achievement scores, but its very broad!
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Even if we take the "worst example" of grade 3 loss (Grade 3 writing), we see more deteriorations (58% of schools) than improvements, but the distribution is wide and 40% of schools showed improvements.
Placebo-controlled trials compare a vaccine to an inactive substance (placebo). This helps measure how effective the vaccine is. In the case of vaccines, often, the placebo is not "saline", but rather a previous vaccine or vaccine solution.
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When a safe, effective vaccine already exists, using an inactive placebo means some participants are deliberately left unprotected against disease. This creates unnecessary harm.
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Ethical standards require minimizing harm and offering participants the best available care. When a proven vaccine exists, denying it to anyone—regardless of location—is unethical.
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In Canada during the Delta wave, vaccination prevented infection (unvaccinated 6x higher chance of being infected). As well, being unvaccinated led to a 22X chance of being hospitalized and an 18X chance of dying.
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For confirmed infections, the IFR for unvaccinated was a whopping 2.4%. The IFR for being vaccinated was much lower, both due to preventing infection and reducing the consequences of it.
Delta was a very deadly strain, and unvaccinated people died/suffered the most.
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When Omicron hit, it was a strain that evaded vaccinations, leading to enormous numbers of infections, even in vaccinated people.
However, the immunity protection vs hospitalization and death was still enormous, and unvaccinated Canadians were 12X more likely to die.
Correcting revisionist history:
"COVID is not a problem for young people in the US"
Covid responsible (not "with", underlying cause) for 2% of all deaths <20. That's 1 out of every 50 deaths of all kids who die. #1 in infectious diseases, 5th in disease overall.
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COVID-19 deaths created 300,000 American orphans, 330,000 if we count "primary caregivers" and 380,000 if we count "secondary caregivers". That's a lot of childhood harm.
2x as common for Black kids
4x as common for Indigenous kids
1.6X as common for Hispanic kids
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Our most vulnerable children, with medical illnesses, suffered the most during the pandemic. Children with heart disease, respiratory disease, neurologic diseases, and chromosomal abnormalities suffered more severe symptoms than did children without those conditions.
Why do you use pronouns in your bio?
Because it's an easy way to promote inclusivity & to increase awareness of gender expression. It costs me nothing, &because I work with kids who are establishing their identity it shows that I don't make assumptions.
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Is being transgender a mental illness?
Being transgender is not a mental illness. It is a natural variation of human phenotype, though some transgender individuals may experience distress, called gender dysphoria, which is addressed through appropriate care.
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Can a man be a woman?
Yes. Some individuals identify as a gender different from their assigned sex at birth.
"What is a woman?"
A woman is a female by identity. This can refer to biological sex identity or social gender identity, depending on the context.
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🧵RFK Jr. is an antivax, AIDS-denying, absolutely antiscientific conspiracist.🧵
ANTIVAX:
“They get [vaccinated], that night they have a fever of 103, they go to sleep, and three months later their brain is gone... This is a Holocaust, what this is doing to our country.”
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ANTIVAX:
"I do believe that autism does come from vaccines"
Metaanalyses involving MILLIONS of children have confirmed there is no link. The lie started with another antivaxxer, disgraced fraudster Andrew Wakefield, who fabricated data.
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ANTIVAX:
"I've read all the science on autism and I can tell you, if you want to know... If it didn't come from the vaccines, then where did it come from?"
Autism primarily from combo of genetic factors & early brain development differences.