Publication | Closed Access
Person Factors Associated With Suicidal Behavior Among African American Women and Men.
112
Citations
69
References
2004
Year
Psychological Co-morbiditiesSubstance UsePerson Factors AssociatedMental HealthPerson Risk FactorsPsychologySocial SciencesBlack WomenAfrican American StudiesPublic HealthSuicidal BehaviorMinority StressPsychiatryAfrican American WomenPsychosocial FactorEthnic IdentityPsychosocial ResearchSubstance AbuseMale AttemptersAddictionSuicideMedicinePsychopathology
This study compared person risk factors among the following groups of low-income, African American adults in an urban, public hospital: (a) suicide attempters and nonattempters, (b) male and female attempters, and (c) all 4 groups (50 female attempters, 50 female nonattempters, 50 male attempters, and 50 male nonattempters). Participants completed psychological distress, aggression, substance use, cognitive processes, religiosity/spirituality, and ethnic identity measures. Compared with nonattempters, attempters reported more psychological distress, aggression, substance use, and maladaptive coping strategies; less religiosity/spirituality; and lower levels of ethnic identity. Male attempters endorsed more substance use than female attempters. No person risk factors differentiated among the 4 groups. Assessment of person risk factors and implementation of commensurate culturally competent interventions are recommended.
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