一种新的分类方法来理解导致军队自杀的因素。

Paul T Bartone
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引用次数: 0

摘要

自2005年以来,美国军人的自杀率急剧上升,尽管领导层非常重视自杀意识和预防,但自杀率仍在继续上升。预防工作已证明是不成功的,也许是因为它们侧重于相关因素,而不是潜在的更根本的促成因素。目前军队里的自杀预防和教育项目只是治标不治本,而忽略了根本问题。本文提出了一种新的分类方法,用于组织和思考与军队自杀有关的众多因素。我们区分了四组与自杀相关的因素:(1)形成性因素是导致自杀的长期的、根本的因素,有助于疏离感和无力感;(2)背景因素与自杀有关,但没有明确的因果关系,如年龄和性别;(3)促发因素是近期的致病因素,即能使个体突然陷入绝望的急性压力事件,如婚姻破裂;(4)使能因素是那些促进自杀行为,但不是潜在原因的因素。例如,这包括酒精和毒品,以及容易获得武器。为了取得成功,防止军队自杀的努力应该针对形成因素。提出了一个模型,在这个模型中,军事特定的形成因素被证明有助于疏远和无能为力,这是导致自杀的关键因素。根据韧性的耐受性模型,提出了一些建议,以建立军事人员的承诺感(相对于疏离感)和控制力(相对于无力感)作为减少自杀的策略。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A new taxonomy for understanding factors leading to suicide in the military.

In the years since 2005, suicides among U.S. military personnel have risen dramatically, and continue to rise despite significant leadership attention to suicide awareness and prevention. Prevention efforts have proven unsuccessful, perhaps because they have focused on associated factors, rather than the underlying more fundamental contributing ones. Current suicide prevention and education programs in the military address the symptoms, while ignoring the underlying problem. This paper presents a new taxonomy for organizing and thinking about the multitude of factors associated with suicide in the military. We distinguish four sets of factors associated with suicide: (1) Formative factors are the long-term, fundamental causative factors in suicide, contributing to alienation and powerlessness; (2) Background factors are associated with suicide, but are not clearly causative, as for example age and sex; (3) Precipitating factors are the near-term causative factors, acute stressful events that can plunge the individual into sudden despair, such as a broken marriage; (4) Enabling factors are those that facilitate the act of suicide, but are not underlying causes. This includes for example alcohol and drugs, and easy access to weapons. To succeed, efforts to prevent suicide in the military should be directed to the formative factors. A model is presented in which military-specific formative factors are shown to contribute to alienation and powerlessness, key factors that can lead to suicide. Drawing from the hardiness model of resilience, some recommendations are provided for building up the sense of commitment (vs. alienation) and control (vs. powerlessness) in military personnel as a strategy for reducing suicide.

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