John Mark Wiginton, Stefan D Baral, Travis H Sanchez, Holly C Wilcox, Sarah M Murray
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Objective: Guided by Minority Stress and Interpersonal and Ideation-to-Action Theories of Suicide, we sought to identify latent classes of painful and provocative events (PPEs), determine associations with class membership, and assess class-specific suicide attempt prevalence among cisgender sexually minoritized men (SMM) with suicidal ideation in the United States.
Method: Using data collected from October 2020 to January 2021 from 1617 SMM reporting past-year suicidal ideation, we performed latent class analysis on 22 PPE items spanning sexual behavior stigma, substance use, high-risk sex, and food and housing insecurity. We used multinomial logistic regression to assess associations with class membership and the Bolck-Croon-Hagenaars method to estimate class-specific past-year suicide attempt prevalence.
Results: Participant mean age was 29 years, 63% (n = 1010) were non-Hispanic white, and 14% (n = 221) reported a past-year suicide attempt. Five classes emerged: Extreme (7%, n = 113), featuring pervasive stigma, polysubstance use, high-risk sex, and food and housing insecurity; Severe/marijuana (15%, n = 236), featuring pervasive stigma, alcohol use, marijuana use, high-risk sex, and food insecurity; Severe (18%, n = 296), featuring the same PPEs minus marijuana use; Moderate (17%, n = 267), featuring family stigma, verbal harassment, some polysubstance use, and high-risk sex; and Mild (44%, n = 705), featuring family and friends stigma, verbal harassment, and alcohol use. Significantly higher suicide attempt prevalence emerged in the Extreme/Severe classes (12-16%) relative to the Mild/Moderate classes (2%).
Conclusions: Stigma and substance use were common across classes, implicating both as key factors shaping suicide risk among SMM. Holistic, multipronged, tailored interventions targeting stigma, substance use, and other PPEs are needed.
期刊介绍:
Archives of Suicide Research, the official journal of the International Academy of Suicide Research (IASR), is the international journal in the field of suicidology. The journal features original, refereed contributions on the study of suicide, suicidal behavior, its causes and effects, and techniques for prevention. The journal incorporates research-based and theoretical articles contributed by a diverse range of authors interested in investigating the biological, pharmacological, psychiatric, psychological, and sociological aspects of suicide.