Despite high rates of suicide among Asian American college students, few studies have examined risk factors for the population.The current study focused on suicidal ideation in Asian Americans at a time of transition: the first year of college.The interpersonal changes (social support, social connectedness and family conflict) associated with freshmen year were expected to predict current ideation as well as ideation one year later.Two-hundred and twenty-four college freshmen (149 women and 75 men) participated at Time 1, and 94 of them (62 women and 32 men) returned usable data at Time 2.Results showed that although all three interpersonal factors at Time 1 predicted current ideation, none of them predicted ideation at Time 2.However, once participants were stratified into groups by acculturation levels, different patterns emerged: The suicidal ideation of highly acculturated individuals was more closely tied to feelings of social disconnectedness.The implications are discussed, along with possible strategies for counseling centers to better identify suicidal students.
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Interpersonal Factors and Suicidal Ideation in Asian American College Freshmen.