Youth Suicide Research Consortium

Expanding opportunities for interdisciplinary and diverse research on youth suicide

Meeting the Moment

Integrating Community, Arts, and Data Innovations to Advance Equity in Youth Suicide Prevention

Youth suicidal behaviors are a public health crisis. Nationally, about 1 in 4 high school students report thinking about suicide in a given year, while about 1 in 10 high school students report attempting suicide (CDC, 2024). In New York City, rates of suicide ideation and attempts mirror national rates, with Black and Latino students reporting higher rates than their non-Hispanic white peers, and LGBTQ+ students reporting substantially higher rates than their heterosexual peers (Stratton et al., 2025).

The YSRC, co-founded by Hunter College Professor Regina Miranda and colleagues, was launched in January of 2019 to respond to this national public health crisis. We are an interdisciplinary network of researchers dedicated to the study of youth suicidal behavior among diverse populations (i.e., diversity based on race, ethnicity, socioeconomic status, gender, sexual orientation, and ability), with an emphasis on understanding and decreasing disparities.

Recognizing that contemporary models of suicide have relied on research with adult populations, despite a higher onset and growing prevalence of suicidal behavior in adolescence and emerging adulthood, our first goal has been to leverage our collective expertise to improve research on youth suicidal behavior, suicide prevention, suicide postvention, and treatment. Furthermore, the increasing diversity of the US population, particularly among youth, suggests a pressing need for theories and research that address issues of diversity. Thus, our second goal has been to increase research on suicide among underrepresented populations of youth by fostering multilevel and cross-disciplinary conceptualizations of youth suicide and self-harm in the United States. Third, we have sought to empower researchers from a variety of backgrounds and disciplines to advance in their careers by mentoring aspiring and junior researchers interested in the study of youth suicidal behavior. Finally, we want to disseminate what we know, partner with, and learn from families, teachers, clinicians, youth, and other community members who are not researchers or academics but for whom suicidal behaviors are of concern. It is in the spirit of these goals that we are organizing our Sixth National Conference, first in-person conference. Registration for the conference will be free, in keeping with our focus on accessibility and bridging gaps across sectors and disciplines.

Blogs

 

The Talk: Not the One You’re Thinking of

Having a conversation with youth about mental health and suicide can be extremely difficult…

Stress and Adolescent Suicide: What Can We Learn from the Body?

Ask any teenager if they feel occasional stress in their relationship with their parents…

Youth and Digital Technology Use

Over the past decade digital technology has become ubiquitous in the lives of teens and young adults…