Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
Life

'Kids Who Join Youth Gangs Prone To Depression'

The Canadian Press, 14 Apr, 2016 01:07 PM
    Kids who join youth gangs are more prone to depression and suicidal thoughts and mental health problems only get worse if they do not leave the gangs, a study has found.
     
    Gang membership is associated with greater levels of depression as well as a 67 percent increase in suicidal thoughts and a 104 percent increase in suicide attempts.
     
    "Youth who join a gang are much more likely to have mental health issues and then being in the gang actually makes it worse," said Chris Melde from Michigan State University.
     
    "Kids join gangs for reasons but when we try to find the benefits - whether it's for protection, a sense of worth, whatever -- we're finding it actually makes an already significant problem in their lives even worse," Melde added in the paper published in the journal Criminal Justice and Behavior.
     
    Several youth -- particularly from poor families -- join gangs to escape hardship for money, protection, status or a sense of belonging they are unable to get at home, school or elsewhere.
     
    However, they found no discernible benefits as the rate of substance abuse and violent victimisation only increased after kids joined gangs.
     
    "If you think of gang membership as a coping mechanism, it doesn't work," Melde stated, adding that it does not act as an antidepressant for youth.

    MORE Life ARTICLES

    Right At Home: Too Much Stuff? This Holiday, Consider Gifts To Use - And Use Up

    Right At Home: Too Much Stuff? This Holiday, Consider Gifts To Use - And Use Up
    The holiday catalogues and gift guides are starting to pour in, full of wonderful stuff to wrap for friends and family. But what about those who don't really want more stuff?

    Right At Home: Too Much Stuff? This Holiday, Consider Gifts To Use - And Use Up

    Revlon Seeks To Heat Up Its Brand Recognition With New 'LOVE IS ON' Campaign

    Revlon Seeks To Heat Up Its Brand Recognition With New 'LOVE IS ON' Campaign
    Revlon is looking for love to spice up its brand recognition. The beauty products maker is launching its global "Love is On" marketing campaign, hoping to regain its lofty spot in the pecking order of cosmetic brands.

    Revlon Seeks To Heat Up Its Brand Recognition With New 'LOVE IS ON' Campaign

    Verbal abuse equal for both genders at workplace

    Verbal abuse equal for both genders at workplace
    A systematic review of the available literature has revealed that there is no significant difference in the prevalence of verbal abuse in the workplace between men and women....

    Verbal abuse equal for both genders at workplace

    Young Britons pay for their heightened carnal desires

    Young Britons pay for their heightened carnal desires
    Young, single British professionals with a taste for binge drinking and recreational drugs are willing to pay for sex and are fine with possessing multiple sexual partner...

    Young Britons pay for their heightened carnal desires

    'Lost' languages get ingrained in brain

    'Lost' languages get ingrained in brain
    Traces of the mother tongue that babies learn remain in the brain years later even if they totally stop using the language, as can happen in cases of international adoption...

    'Lost' languages get ingrained in brain

    'Social status more strongly inherited than height'

    Social status is consistently passed down among families over multiple generations - in fact, it is even more strongly inherited than height, the findings showed....

    'Social status more strongly inherited than height'