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School Threat Assessment Versus Suicide Assessment: Statewide Prevalence and Case Characteristics

NCJ Number
254186
Journal
Psychology in the Schools Volume: 56 Issue: 3 Dated: 2019 Pages: 378-392
Author(s)
Anna G. Burnette; Francis Huang; Jennifer L. Maeng; Dewey Cornell
Date Published
2019
Length
15 pages
Annotation

This data analysis from school threat assessments in Virginia schools compared the prevalence and case characteristics of student threats to school safety and student suicide risk.

Abstract

Threat assessment is a violence prevention strategy used to investigate and respond to threats to harm others. In 2013, Virginia mandated the use of threat assessment teams for threats to self and to others, effectively subsuming suicide assessment with threat assessment and raising questions about the distinction between the two practices. In a statewide sample of 2,861 cases from 926 schools, there were more threats to self (60 percent) than others (35 percent), with only 5 percent involving threats to both self and others. Threats to self were more likely to be made by females (odds ratio [OR]=3.38) and students with fewer prior disciplinary actions (OR=0.48). Threats to self were much less likely to involve a weapon (OR=0.07), but more likely to be attempted (OR=1.50) and result in mental health services (OR=2.96). They were much less likely to result in out of school suspensions (OR=0.07), legal action (OR=0.17), and changes in placement (OR=0.53). Overall, these findings support a clear distinction between suicide and threat assessment. (publisher abstract modified)