Perceived burdensomeness and suicide-related behaviors in clinical samples: Current evidence and future directions
Auteurs
Ryan M Hill, Jeremy W Pettit.
Résumé
textbfContext: The interpersonal-psychological theory of suicide identifies perceived burdensomeness as a primary component of suicidal desire and a possible point of intervention for suicide prevention. A growing literature has explored the relationship between perceived burdensomeness and suicide-related behaviors. textbfObjective: The aim of this review is to integrate the evidence, identify critical gaps in the evidence-base, and explore implications for translation to prevention and intervention science. textbfMethods: Papers published that reported on the association between perceived burdensomeness and suicide-related behaviors were included. textbfResults: The literature indicates (a) significant cross-sectional associations between perceived burdensomeness and suicidal ideation and suicide attempts and (b) that perceived burdensomeness acts as either a moderator or a mediator of the association between risk and protective factors and suicide-related behaviors. textbfConclusion: Research is needed to examine the longitudinal association between perceived burdensomeness and suicide-related behaviors, develop additional measurement approaches, generalize findings to other samples, and begin translating findings to prevention and intervention science. IDÉATION TENTATIVE THÉORIE FARDEAU PERCEPTION-SOI APPARTENANCE REVUE-LITTÉRATURE SUICIDOLOGIE RECHERCHE IDÉATION THÉORIE PERCEPTION-SOI FARDEAU APPARTENANCE REVUE-LITTÉRATURE
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