“…Systematic reviews indicate that the strongest risk factors for youth suicide are current mental disorders and a history of suicidal behavior and psychiatric care (Beautrais, ; Bilsen, ; Cavanagh, Carson, Sharpe, & Lawrie, ; Isometsä, ). Independent of mental disorders, negative psychosocial factors, broken homes (separation, divorce, or death of parents), family psychiatric disorder or suicidal behavior, disciplinary problems, antisocial behavior, alcohol or drug misuse, previous self‐harm, and adverse life events, such as violence at home, bullying, and sexual abuse, are a common background (Beautrais, ; Bilsen, ; Cavanagh et al, ; Cavanagh, Owens, & Johnstone, ; Cheng, Chen, Chen, & Jenkins, ; Gould, Fisher, Parides, Flory, & Shaffer, ; Hawton & James, ; Heikkinen, Aro, & Lönnqvist, ; Marttunen, Aro, Henriksson, & Lönnqvist, ; Tidemalm et al, ). According to the life course model of suicidal behavior, an individual's risk is determined by accumulative exposure to a wide range of risk factors, including social disadvantage, family problems, childhood adversity, personality factors, mental disorders, and exposure to recent stressful life events (Fergusson, Woodward, & Horwood, ).…”