Access to firearms in the home is an independent, evidence-based risk factor for completed suicide in adolescents and should prompt lethal-means safety counseling.
You are counseling the mother of teenage twin boys about risk factors for suicide in adolescents. The mother tells you that the boys' father has lately become interested in "prepping" and has begun to store dry goods, water, batteries, and emergency medical supplies in a spare bedroom of the home. The father has also recently purchased a rifle and a handgun as part of his prepping supplies.
How does the father's survivalist behavior influence the risk of suicide for these teenage twin boys?
Answer Options:
Hanging/suffocation is the leading method of suicide. Having access to a gun in the home neither increases nor decreases the rate or success of suicide.
Self-poisoning is the leading method of suicide. Although access to guns should be restricted, the presence of a gun within the home neither increases nor decreases the rate or success of suicide.
Firearms are the leading method of suicide; however, restricting access to firearms and locking the firearms and ammunition together effectively reduces the risk of the firearm being used in an attempted suicide.
Risk of suicide is dependent on psychiatric factors such as depression, and having a firearm in the home does not independently increase the risk.
Firearms are the leading method of suicide. If a gun is in the home, then it is may be used as a method of suicide and is much more likely to be in the home of successful suicide victims relative to age-matched controls.
Firearm access is not just a correlate of “prepping”—it is a major, modifiable, independent risk factor for suicide death because firearms have high lethality and require little time between impulse and attempt. The AAP (2022) emphasizes that the presence of firearms in the home increases risk of suicide and unintentional injury among children/adolescents and supports counseling on safe storage and reducing access during periods of risk. CDC WISQARS data consistently show firearms as a leading mechanism for suicide deaths in U.S. adolescents (method distributions vary by age/sex over time, but firearms remain a top contributor to fatalities).
Board-takers often miss this item by over-attributing suicide risk to psychiatric diagnosis alone (e.g., depression) and under-weighting access to lethal means. For exams, the key move is recognizing that means availability changes outcomes—especially for high-fatality methods like firearms—so “psychiatric factors only” is incorrect.
| Option | What It Tests / Implies | Why It’s Wrong Here |
|---|---|---|
| Hanging/suffocation is the leading method of suicide. Having access to a gun in the home neither increases nor decreases the rate or success of suicide. | Misidentifies leading method; denies firearm access effect | Firearm access is associated with increased suicide risk; hanging/suffocation is commonly second but firearms are a leading method in U.S. youth deaths (CDC WISQARS). |
| Self-poisoning is the leading method of suicide. Although access to guns should be restricted, the presence of a gun within the home neither increases nor decreases the rate or success of suicide. | Poisoning as leading method; denies firearm access effect | Self-poisoning is common in attempts, but less lethal; denying risk increase contradicts AAP (2022) and epidemiologic evidence. |
| Firearms are the leading method of suicide; however, restricting access to firearms and locking the firearms and ammunition together effectively reduces the risk of the firearm being used in an attempted suicide. | Acknowledges firearms lead but suggests “locking together” as effective | Best practice is unloaded, locked firearm; ammunition locked separately (AAP 2022). Locking them together does not reflect recommended safer storage. |
| Risk of suicide is dependent on psychiatric factors such as depression, and having a firearm in the home does not independently increase the risk. | Suicide risk only psychiatric; firearms not independent | Contradicts evidence that firearm presence/access independently raises suicide death risk and lethality (AAP 2022; multiple observational studies). |
| Firearms are the leading method of suicide. If a gun is in the home, then it is may be used as a method of suicide and is much more likely to be in the home of successful suicide victims relative to age-matched controls. | Firearms are leading method; home access increases risk and decedents more likely to have firearm access | Matches guideline-consistent counseling: lethal means access increases risk and lethality; home firearm presence is associated with suicide deaths. |
When evaluating suicide risk in adolescents, access to firearms is an independent, high-impact risk factor because it markedly increases case-fatality—counsel on lethal-means restriction and safe storage.
The stem distracts with “prepping” as a behavioral quirk; the real tested concept is that *introducing firearms into the home changes suicide lethality and completion risk*, independent of psychiatric diagnosis. Exams reward recognizing modifiable environmental risks, not just DSM-based risk factors.
A 16-year-old with recent suicidal ideation is being discharged after ED evaluation with a safety plan and close follow-up. The family has firearms at home. Which recommendation is most consistent with pediatric guidance on safer storage?
A resident says, “Poisoning is the biggest concern because it’s the most common way teens die by suicide.” Which correction is most accurate for board-style counseling?
A 15-year-old denies depression symptoms but has escalating impulsivity and intermittent suicidal thoughts. The parent reports a newly purchased handgun at home. What is the best interpretation?
In lethal-means counseling for a teen with suicidal ideation, what is the primary prevention aim?
A 17-year-old screened positive for suicidal ideation on a validated tool at a well visit. Which additional assessment is most important to perform immediately?
How would your counseling differ for (1) a teen with passive suicidal ideation and no plan but firearms unsecured at home versus (2) a teen with a specific plan, access to a loaded firearm, and recent intoxication?
Q1: Do boards expect you to know the “leading method” of adolescent suicide?
A: Yes—pediatric and family medicine boards commonly test that firearms contribute to a large share of adolescent suicide deaths (CDC WISQARS) and that access increases fatal risk.
Q2: Is firearm access still important if the teen has no diagnosed depression?
A: Yes—exams expect recognition that lethal means access is an independent, modifiable risk factor (AAP 2022).
Q3: What storage counseling is most exam-reliable?
A: Recommend firearms locked and unloaded, with ammunition locked separately; emphasize temporary removal/off-site storage during periods of elevated risk (AAP 2022).
Q4: Are “no-suicide contracts” adequate?
A: No—boards favor safety planning, close follow-up, and lethal-means safety rather than relying on contracts.
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