The interpersonal theory of suicide risk in male US service members/veterans: the independent effects of perceived burdensomeness and thwarted belongingness.

IF 4.2 2区 医学 Q1 PSYCHIATRY
Rebecca K Blais, Kevin J Grimm
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Introduction: Suicide rates remain high among US military service member/veteran (SM/V) males with overall trends showing an upward trajectory. Several empirical studies and official US government reports show that interpersonal challenges can substantially increase suicide risk. One theory, the Interpersonal Theory of Suicide (IPT), focuses thwarted belongingness, perceived burdensomeness, capability for suicide, and their interactions, as key contributors to suicide risk. Extant military studies are subscribed to specific subsamples and/or do not test the full theory. This has resulted in mixed findings or findings with limited generalizability. The current study addressed these limitations.Method: A convenience sample of 508 male SM/Vs completed self-report measures of lifetime suicide ideation, likelihood of making a future attempt, thwarted belongingness, perceived burdensomeness, capability for suicide, and demographics. Suicide ideation and risk was regressed on IPT variables, relevant interactions, and covariates.Results: The variance accounted for in suicide ideation and likelihood of a future attempt was 32% and 62%, respectively. Higher perceived burdensomeness was associated with suicide ideation, and higher thwarted belongingness had a marginally significant association with suicide ideation. The presence of suicide ideation and higher thwarted belongingness were associated with the likelihood of making a future attempt. Capability for suicide was not associated with the likelihood of making a future attempt.Discussion: Perceived burdensomeness, suicide ideation, and thwarted belongingness appear to individually create risk for future suicide behaviour among US military service members and veterans. Additional work is needed to establish comprehensive theories of suicide risk in this population.

美国男性军人/退伍军人自杀风险的人际关系理论:感知负担和受挫归属感的独立影响。
导读:美国军人/退伍军人(SM/V)男性的自杀率仍然很高,总体趋势呈上升趋势。一些实证研究和美国政府官方报告表明,人际关系的挑战会大大增加自杀风险。一种理论,人际自杀理论(IPT),将受挫的归属感、感知负担、自杀能力以及它们之间的相互作用作为自杀风险的关键因素。现有的军事研究是订阅特定的子样本和/或不测试完整的理论。这导致了不同的研究结果或具有有限的普遍性的研究结果。目前的研究解决了这些局限性。方法:对508名男性SM/ v进行了终身自杀意念、未来尝试可能性、受挫归属感、感知负担、自杀能力和人口统计数据的自我报告。自杀意念与风险在IPT变量、相关交互作用和协变量上进行回归。结果:自杀意念和未来尝试的可能性的方差分别为32%和62%。较高的感知负担与自杀意念有关,较高的受挫归属感与自杀意念有轻微的显著相关。自杀意念的存在和更高的受挫归属感与未来尝试自杀的可能性有关。自杀的能力与未来尝试自杀的可能性无关。讨论:在美国军人和退伍军人中,感觉到的负担、自杀意念和受挫的归属感似乎分别造成了未来自杀行为的风险。需要进一步的工作来建立这一人群自杀风险的综合理论。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.60
自引率
12.00%
发文量
153
审稿时长
18 weeks
期刊介绍: The European Journal of Psychotraumatology (EJPT) is a peer-reviewed open access interdisciplinary journal owned by the European Society of Traumatic Stress Studies (ESTSS). The European Journal of Psychotraumatology (EJPT) aims to engage scholars, clinicians and researchers in the vital issues of how to understand, prevent and treat the consequences of stress and trauma, including but not limited to, posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), depressive disorders, substance abuse, burnout, and neurobiological or physical consequences, using the latest research or clinical experience in these areas. The journal shares ESTSS’ mission to advance and disseminate scientific knowledge about traumatic stress. Papers may address individual events, repeated or chronic (complex) trauma, large scale disasters, or violence. Being open access, the European Journal of Psychotraumatology is also evidence of ESTSS’ stand on free accessibility of research publications to a wider community via the web. The European Journal of Psychotraumatology seeks to attract contributions from academics and practitioners from diverse professional backgrounds, including, but not restricted to, those in mental health, social sciences, and health and welfare services. Contributions from outside Europe are welcome. The journal welcomes original basic and clinical research articles that consolidate and expand the theoretical and professional basis of the field of traumatic stress; Review articles including meta-analyses; short communications presenting new ideas or early-stage promising research; study protocols that describe proposed or ongoing research; case reports examining a single individual or event in a real‑life context; clinical practice papers sharing experience from the clinic; letters to the Editor debating articles already published in the Journal; inaugural Lectures; conference abstracts and book reviews. Both quantitative and qualitative research is welcome.
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