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While the high-profile deaths of Amanda Todd and Rehtaeh Parsons spurred a national debate on bullying, new research suggests depression and conflicts with parents are much more frequently factors in a teen’s decision to end his or her own life.

Researchers who examined coroner records for 94 youth aged 10 to 19 who died from suicide in Toronto over a 14-year period found bullying was a factor in six (6.4%) of the deaths.

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The most common stressors were conflict with parents (21%), problems with girlfriends or boyfriends (17%), problems in school (11%) and criminal or legal trouble (11%).

Depression was detected in 40% of the suicides.

It would be simple but wrong to conclude that one single factor drives teenagers to take their lives, the researchers say.

In particular, bullying appears to be a “relatively rare” cause of death by suicide, they write in the Canadian Journal of Psychiatry.