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The role of bullying victimization in youth suicide: A scoping review of empirical evidence.

Created on 16 Jul 2026

Authors

Anne C Frederiks-Franssen, Rozemarijn van der Ploeg, Antje Janshen, Saskia Mérelle, Diana D van Bergen

Published in

BMC pediatrics. Jul 15, 2026. Epub Jul 15, 2026.

Abstract

While bullying victimization is a well-established risk factor for suicidal ideation and nonfatal suicide attempts among young people, its role in suicide deaths remains poorly understood. This scoping review synthesizes empirical evidence on the prevalence and role of bullying victimization among children and adolescents who died by suicide.
Following PRISMA guidelines, peer-reviewed empirical studies were included if they examined bullying victimization during childhood or adolescence (≤ 21 years) among individuals who died by suicide. Searches were conducted across seven databases in October 2023 and October 2025. Of the 4,233 screened records, 32 studies met the inclusion criteria after full-text review and quality appraisal using the QUIPS and CASP tools. The included studies employed record-based (60%), qualitative narrative (28%), longitudinal cohort (6%), and online ethnographic (6%) designs.
Among studies that systematically assessed bullying victimization, 29-55% reported its presence in the lives of deceased youth, compared with 0.1-22% in studies where bullying was documented only when spontaneously mentioned by informants. Record-based studies indicated that bullying victimization was more frequently documented among females, younger adolescents, and LGBTQ+ youth. Longitudinal cohort studies demonstrated that childhood bullying victimization increased the risk of suicide in adulthood, even after adjusting for individual and familial characteristics, although effect sizes were modest. Qualitative studies, often employing psychosocial autopsy methods, described bullying victimization as a persistent psychosocial stressor embedded within broader constellations of adversity, contributing to feelings of sadness, entrapment, and lack of belongingness. Online ethnographic studies found that hostile audience responses during live-streamed suicides function as cyberbullying and may exacerbate humiliation and hopelessness during acute crises.
Bullying victimization is an important yet understudied risk factor in youth suicide. Across study designs, it emerged as a long-term vulnerability of suicide embedded within complex psychosocial interactions. However, methodological limitations and inconsistent assessment constrain firm conclusions and calls for systematic, theory-driven, and technologically informed research to clarify the contribution of bullying victimization to suicide risk across development.

PMID:
42458335
Bibliographic data and abstract were imported from PubMed on 16 Jul 2026.

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