Craig J Bryan, Jeffrey V Tabares, Jonathan E Butner, Samantha E Daruwala, Melanie L Bozzay, Stephanie M Gorka
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Stability of suicidal ideation significantly differed across groups, however (<i>F</i>(1,132) = 4.5, <i>p</i> = 0.036); male handgun owners had the strongest stability and male non-owners had the weakest stability. Stability of suicidal ideation was significantly lower when participants reported a firearm was nearby as compared to when no firearm was nearby (<i>F</i>(4,17732) = 5.6, <i>p</i> < 0.001). Results suggest firearm availability increases reactivity to the environment, slows recovery from acutely elevated risk states, and may increase vulnerability to sudden shifts to higher risk states characterized by increased probability of suicidal behavior. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
枪支的可获得性与自杀风险的增加有关,但其与自杀意念之间的联系仍不清楚。以往的研究受限于回顾性报告和前瞻性设计,评估之间的间隔时间较长,不适合测量自杀意念的波动。本研究使用生态瞬间评估(EMA)对 138 名美国成年人(81 名手枪持有者,57 名非持有者)的自杀意念进行重复评估。参与者连续 28 天每天接受六次 EMA 提示。结果显示,拥有手枪的男性和女性与未拥有手枪的男性和女性在自杀意念的频率、最大振幅或变异性方面没有群体差异。然而,自杀意念的稳定性在不同组别之间存在显著差异(F(1,132) = 4.5, p = 0.036);男性手枪持有者的稳定性最强,而男性非持有者的稳定性最弱。当参与者报告附近有枪支时,自杀意念的稳定性明显低于附近没有枪支时(F(4,17732) = 5.6,p = 0.036)。
Firearm Availability Reduces the Stability of Suicidal Ideation: Results from an Ecological Momentary Assessment Study.
Firearm availability is correlated with increased risk of suicide but its link with suicidal ideation remains unclear. Previous studies are limited by retrospective reports and prospective designs with lengthy gaps between assessments that are ill-suited for measuring fluctuations in suicidal ideation. This study used ecological momentary assessment (EMA) to repeatedly assess suicidal ideation in a sample of 138 U.S. adults (81 handgun owners, 57 non-owners). Participants received six EMA prompts per day for 28 consecutive days. Results revealed no group differences in the frequency, maximum amplitude, or variability of suicidal ideation across male and female handgun owners and non-owners. Stability of suicidal ideation significantly differed across groups, however (F(1,132) = 4.5, p = 0.036); male handgun owners had the strongest stability and male non-owners had the weakest stability. Stability of suicidal ideation was significantly lower when participants reported a firearm was nearby as compared to when no firearm was nearby (F(4,17732) = 5.6, p < 0.001). Results suggest firearm availability increases reactivity to the environment, slows recovery from acutely elevated risk states, and may increase vulnerability to sudden shifts to higher risk states characterized by increased probability of suicidal behavior. Although these effects were observed in both handgun owners and non-owners, they disproportionately impact handgun owners because they report being near firearms more often.
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.