Abstract
Background and Goals: Suicide attempts occur mostly during adolescence and are much more frequent in females than in males, although males tend to commit suicide more often than females. This study aims to examine the association between female gender, gender conflict, depression, stress and suicide attempts in adolescent girls.
Methods: Participants included 86 adolescent girls aged 12-21 (μ=15.7, SD=3.07) with depression (n=29), attempted suicide (n=15) or both (n=42), admitted consecutively to a tertiary medical center and 93 healthy controls from the community. Depression, suicidal ideation and behavior, gender identity and conflict, personality factors, and stress were compared between the study group and controls and each of the three study-subgroups and controls.
Results: A difference was found in the perception gap of own femininity versus others' expectations of the subject’s femininity, between the suicide attempters both with and without depression and the controls. Personality factors were also found to be related to depression and suicide attempts. Suicide attempters with depression showed more harm avoidance than those without depression. Novelty seeking was significantly higher in non-depressed suicide attempters than in controls but not when compared to suicide attempters with depression.
Conclusion: It seems that suicide attempts and depression may not only be related to female gender identity. Conflicting gender expectations may result in increased stress, raising the risk for suicide attempts, particularly in girls with high harm avoidance.
Keywords: Gender, depression, suicidality, adolescent, femininity, gender paradox.
Adolescent Psychiatry
Title:Association of Perceived Gender Conflict with Depression and Attempted Suicide in Adolescent Girls
Volume: 11 Issue: 1
Author(s): Liat Haruvi Catalan*, Anat Brunstein Klomek, Gal Shoval, Gil Zalsman, Lior Schapir, Tomer Shechner, Orit Krispin, Neta Horesh, Alan Apter and Silvana Fennig
Affiliation:
- Feinberg Child Study Center, Schneider Children’s Medical Center of Israel, Petach Tikva,Israel
Keywords: Gender, depression, suicidality, adolescent, femininity, gender paradox.
Abstract:
Background and Goals: Suicide attempts occur mostly during adolescence and are much more frequent in females than in males, although males tend to commit suicide more often than females. This study aims to examine the association between female gender, gender conflict, depression, stress and suicide attempts in adolescent girls.
Methods: Participants included 86 adolescent girls aged 12-21 (μ=15.7, SD=3.07) with depression (n=29), attempted suicide (n=15) or both (n=42), admitted consecutively to a tertiary medical center and 93 healthy controls from the community. Depression, suicidal ideation and behavior, gender identity and conflict, personality factors, and stress were compared between the study group and controls and each of the three study-subgroups and controls.
Results: A difference was found in the perception gap of own femininity versus others' expectations of the subject’s femininity, between the suicide attempters both with and without depression and the controls. Personality factors were also found to be related to depression and suicide attempts. Suicide attempters with depression showed more harm avoidance than those without depression. Novelty seeking was significantly higher in non-depressed suicide attempters than in controls but not when compared to suicide attempters with depression.
Conclusion: It seems that suicide attempts and depression may not only be related to female gender identity. Conflicting gender expectations may result in increased stress, raising the risk for suicide attempts, particularly in girls with high harm avoidance.
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Cite this article as:
Catalan Haruvi Liat *, Klomek Brunstein Anat , Shoval Gal , Zalsman Gil , Schapir Lior , Shechner Tomer, Krispin Orit , Horesh Neta , Apter Alan and Fennig Silvana, Association of Perceived Gender Conflict with Depression and Attempted Suicide in Adolescent Girls, Adolescent Psychiatry 2021; 11 (1) . https://dx.doi.org/10.2174/2210676611666210915120236
DOI https://dx.doi.org/10.2174/2210676611666210915120236 |
Print ISSN 2210-6766 |
Publisher Name Bentham Science Publisher |
Online ISSN 2210-6774 |

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