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SOCIETY FOR PROMOTION OF COMMUNITY STANDARDS INC.

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Teens using cannabis – seven times more likely to commit suicide

September 11, 2014 by SPCS Leave a Comment

REGULAR cannabis use by teenagers can lead to an increased risk of suicide, greater use of illicit drugs and poor educational achievement a Christchurch study has revealed.

The study, published in medical journal The Lancet, showed daily cannabis users under the age of 17 were 60 per cent less likely to complete high school or attend university and were nearly seven times more likely to attempt suicide.

Daily users were 18 times more likely to become addicted to cannabis and eight times more likely to use other illicit drugs.

Researchers from three large, long-running studies in Christchurch and Melbourne, combined data to investigate the link between cannabis use in adolescence and outcomes later in life.

Professor David Fergusson, leader of the University of Otago’s Christchurch Health and Development Study, said the research was the largest single consistent study done on adolescent use of cannabis.

[The study, done by researchers in Australia and New Zealand, is a meta-analysis of three previous long-running studies that included nearly 4,000 participants.]. [Read more…]

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Filed Under: Crime, Other Tagged With: attempt suicide, cannabis use, decriminalisation of cannabis, illicit drugs, legalisation of cannabis, marijuana, Professor David Fergusson, risk of suicide, suicide

Same-sex ‘marriage’: Teen Suicide tragedies manipulated to advance “gay” agenda

April 12, 2013 by SPCS Leave a Comment

Family First NZ in its submission to the Government Administration Committee on the Marriage (Definition of Marriage) Bill highlighted the misrepresentation of research on teen suicide rates by openly “gay” man Green MP Kevin Hague, a member of the committee, and  by the sponsor of the bill “openly lesbian” Labour List MP Louisa Wall, in order to “advance” their “agenda” (same-sex ‘marriage’). Neither MP nor any other supporter of the bill has responded to the allegations of misrepresentation.

Both MPs have indicated publicly that they are not really interested in getting married to their respective same-sex partners, should the bill pass into law. Their personal disinterest in ‘marriage’, lack of supporting evidence provided, and the legally flawed nature of the bill they are pushing for, has led many opponents to question their claims that legalizing “gay” ‘marriage’ in New Zealand would actually reduce youth suicide rates among the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual Transgender, Intersex, Queer (LGBTIQ) community.

The bills supporters have provided no scientific evidence whatsoever for their claims concerning teen suicide rate reductions from any peer-reviewed research publications, and yet a number of MPs now supporting the bill have been persuaded by such spurious claims, including National MP – Dr Paul Hutchison, who represents the Hunua electorate. One wonders why he has failed to present the hard evidence to the country in his speeches on the bill, rather than apparently relying on anecdotal hearsay from Louisa Wall.

see: http://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10830418

The Family First submission stated:

MISREPRESENTING RESEARCH ON TEEN SUICIDE

We note comments made by politicians and supporters of the bill relating to teen suicide.[i]They have referred to research done by the New Zealand Adolescent Health Research group, and they suggest that the disproportionately high rates of suicide attempts by same-sex attracted teens is due in part to the current definition of marriage.

But significantly, the report says:

“It is apparent that further investigation of potential differences according to sexual attraction is warranted and that studies in the area of human sexuality require some understanding of a range of inter-related concepts, with the issues of definition and description holding particular importance.” (page 5)

And in a comparison of rates between 2001 and 2007, the report says:

“There were no major changes observed between the two surveys (2001 and 2007) in the proportions of same/both-sex-attracted students reporting depressive symptoms or suicide attempts, even though there were substantial reductions in suicide attempts among opposite sex- attracted students over that time.” (page 21)

This is significant because during this period of time, major changes were made to legislation regarding same-sex couples including the Civil Union Act and the Relationships Act. If the assertions were correct, there should have been a drop in these rates.

Massachusetts has been tracking gay high school students for a decade using the Centre for Disease Control and Prevention’s Youth Risk Behaviour Survey. In 2001, gay teens in Massachusetts were almost four times more likely to have attempted suicide (31% vs. 8%). In 2007 — after four years of legalised same-sex marriage in that state — gay teens were still about four times more likely to attempt suicide than non-gay teens (29% vs. 6%).[ii]

What politicians and supporters also didn’t mention was one of the conclusions from the Fergusson, Horwood & Beautrais 1999 study (quoted in the Youth ’07 report) –

“it has been argued that because of a series of social processes that centre on homophobic attitudes, GLB youth are exposed to serious personal stresses that increase their likelihood of suicidal behaviour. However, a reappraisal of these claims showed them not to be well founded in evidence, and reviews of this issue concluded that problems in existing research were such that no clear conclusions about the role of sexual orientation in suicidal behaviour could be drawn.”[iii]

Teen suicide is always a tragedy. But tragedies should not be manipulated in order to advance an agenda.

The attempts to argue that if we allow same-sex marriage, same-sex attracted teens will be less likely to have disproportionately high rates of alcohol and other drug-abuse problems, depression, other mental health problems, self-harm, unsafe sexual behaviour, including HIV risk, and suicide attempts are not supported by research, and are therefore not relevant to this particular debate

References:

[i] http://www.greens.org.nz/speeches/kevin-hague-speaks-marriage-definition-marriage-amendment-bill

[ii] http://www.doe.mass.edu/cnp/hprograms/yrbs/

[iii] http://archpsyc.jamanetwork.com/article.aspx?articleid=205418

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Filed Under: Homosexuality, Marriage Tagged With: gay marriage, Kevin Hague MP, LGBTIQ, Louisa Wall MP, suicide, teen suicide, youth suicide

Social media sites ‘spur to suicide’ – finding of Otago University researchers

May 12, 2012 by SPCS Leave a Comment

Text messaging and social media sites such as Bebo contributed to the spread of suicide in a spate of teen deaths, a New Zealand study has found.

Otago University researchers found that communication via text message and Bebo were likely to have helped the spread of suicide in an area where eight teenagers killed themselves within a short time span.

The spread of inaccurate information and rumour, the “glorifying” of dead young people through online tribute pages, and the heightened anxiety felt in the community may have all contributed towards copycat suicides, the authors found.

They said suicide prevention guidelines needed to be reviewed to help prevent suicide contagion through social media.

Other suggestions included monitoring social network sites and removing Bebo and Facebook pages.

In the study Adolescent Suicide Cluster and Electronic Communications Technology published in international journal Crisis 2012, Dr Keren Skegg and fellow researchers investigated eight teenage suicides in an unnamed New Zealand city within a relatively large rural district in 2006.

Six of the suicides happened within a six-month period, while the two other suicides – one in a neighbouring district, and the other several months before – were included after the researchers found links.

They found while mainstream media was responsible in its coverage, rumour spread quickly on social networking sites. Inaccurate information about suicide, including the method, spread through Bebo and text messaging – sometimes only hours after the deaths. Fear and anxiety were heightened.

Online tribute pages became shrines to the dead, with overwhelmingly positive messages posted.

FOR FULL REPORT go to ….

http://www.stuff.co.nz/national/6910338/Social-media-sites-spur-to-suicide

Sourced from The Dominion Post, 12 May, 2012. p. A11.

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Filed Under: Other Tagged With: Bebo, Crisis 2012, Dr Keren Skegg, Electronic Communications, Facebook, online tribute pages, social network sites, suicide, Suicide Cluster

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