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Pressure
Can Push Female
Collegians Over the Edge
(HealthScoutNews)
-- Parental pressure to excel in school can push female college
students to consider suicide, says a Penn State study.
It found female college students
who have mothers who expected academic perfection and fathers
who support the mother's high expectations are more likely to
consider suicide than female college students with parents who
exert less pressure.
The study included a survey of
421 college students -- 227 females and 194 males. It found that
19.4 percent - one in five -- of both female and male college
students contemplated suicide.
However, females accounted for
4 percent of the students who actually attempted suicide, compared
to 1.1 percent for males. That means that for female students,
thoughts of suicide are four times more likely to result in a
suicide attempt.
The study also found the female
college students most vulnerable to suicidal thoughts are those
with mothers who demand academic perfection and keep raising their
expectations.
That kind of parental pressure
doesn't cause male students to move closer to suicide, the study
says.
The study appeared in a recent
issue of the Journal of Family Communication.
Suicide is the third leading cause
of death in the United States for people aged 15 to 24, accounting
for more deaths than heart disease, AIDS, cancer, pneumonia, stroke,
influenza and chronic heart disease combined.
More information
For more about college student
suicide prevention, go to the Jed
Foundation.
Reference
Source 101
For more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
PreventDisease.com's "Quick
Prevention Resources".
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