Optimism/pessimism and future orientation as predictors of suicidal ideation: Are there ethnic differences?

Auteurs

E A Yu, E C Chang.

Résumé

textbfOBJECTIVE: The present study sought to test the generalizability of Chang et al.'s (2013) model, which suggests that optimism/pessimism and future orientation function as additive and interactive predictors of suicidal risk, to specific ethnic minority college student groups (i.e., Asian Americans, African Americans, and Latino Americans). textbfMETHOD: The present study used Chang et al.'s (2013) model to predict suicidal ideation among 81 (34 male and 47 female) Asian-American, 71 (22 male and 49 female) African-American adults, and 83 (34 male and 49 female) Latino-American college students. textbfRESULTS: Our results indicated that this model did not predict suicidal ideation well for Asian-American college students; however, it did work well to predict suicidal ideation for African-American and Latino-American college students. textbfCONCLUSIONS: Our findings indicate that optimism/pessimism and future orientation are important positive cognitions involved with suicidal ideation for African-American and Latino-American college students. Further research is needed to better understand the cultural underpinnings of how these positive cognitions work to predict suicide-related outcomes. ÉTATS-UNIS GENRE HOMME FEMME JEUNE-ADULTE IDÉATION ÉTUDIANT-UNIVERSITAIRE AFRO-AMÉRICAIN LATINO-AMÉRICAIN ASIO-AMÉRICAIN ETHNICITÉ OPTIMISME PESSIMISME


Retour à la recherche