Suicide Attitudes Among Suicide Loss Survivors and Their Adaptation to Loss: A Cross-Cultural Study in Japan and the United States

被引:0
|
作者
Kawashima, Daisuke [1 ]
Kawamoto, Shizuka [2 ]
Shiraga, Keisuke [3 ]
Kheibari, Athena [4 ]
Cerel, Julie [5 ]
Kawano, Kenji [6 ]
机构
[1] Chukyo Univ, Sch Psychol, Nagoya, Aichi, Japan
[2] Univ Yamanashi, Fac Educ, Kofu, Yamanashi, Japan
[3] Joetsu Univ Educ, Sch Educ, Joetsu, Japan
[4] Wayne State Univ, Sch Social Work, Detroit, MI USA
[5] Univ Kentucky, Coll Social Work, Lexington, KY USA
[6] Ritsumeikan Univ, Coll Comprehens Psychol, Ibaraki, Japan
基金
日本学术振兴会;
关键词
suicide bereavement; postvention; cross-cultural comparison; suicide attitudes; community; INDIVIDUALISM-COLLECTIVISM; MENTAL-HEALTH; BEREAVEMENT; POSTVENTION; DEPRESSION; VALIDITY;
D O I
10.1177/00302228211051512
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Survivors' adaptation to a suicide loss is likely influenced by their attitudes toward suicide and their respective sociocultural contexts. Our study aimed to compare suicide attitudes and their association with depressive symptoms and sense of community safety in Japanese and American suicide loss survivors. A total of 193 Japanese survivors and 232 American survivors completed online surveys. The results show that Japanese survivors tended not to consider suicide as an illness or to recognize that others understood their experience but were more likely than American survivors to consider suicide as justifiable. Regression analyses indicated that taking suicide as a right was associated with depressive symptoms. Further, their sense of being understood by others was positively correlated with perceived community safety in both samples, but justifying suicide and considering it to be an illness was positively related to perceived community safety only among Japanese survivors.
引用
收藏
页码:1258 / 1274
页数:17
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] MANAGEMENT OF CHRONIC PAIN IN UNITED-STATES AND JAPAN - CROSS-CULTURAL COMPARISON
    CHAPMAN, CR
    CLINICAL MEDICINE, 1975, 82 (05) : 39 - &
  • [42] A Cross-Cultural Investigation of Metamotivational Knowledge of Construal Level in the United States and Japan
    Nguyen, Tina
    Togawa, Taku
    Scholer, Abigail A.
    Fujita, Kentaro
    MOTIVATION SCIENCE, 2020, 6 (04) : 386 - 400
  • [43] Perceived Determinants of Disclosing Suicide Loss A Qualitative Study Among Women
    Oexle, Nathalie
    Puschner, Nadja
    Votruba, Nicole
    Ruesch, Nicolas
    Mayer, Lea
    CRISIS-THE JOURNAL OF CRISIS INTERVENTION AND SUICIDE PREVENTION, 2023, 44 (06) : 470 - 476
  • [44] A Cross-Cultural Comparison of Factors Associated With School Bullying in Japan and the United States
    Hilton, Jeanne
    Anngela-Cole, Linda
    Wakita, Juri
    FAMILY JOURNAL, 2010, 18 (04): : 413 - 422
  • [45] Children's drawings -: A cross-cultural analysis from Japan and the United States
    La Voy, SK
    Pedersen, WC
    Reitz, JM
    Brauch, AA
    Luxenberg, TM
    Nofsinger, CC
    SCHOOL PSYCHOLOGY INTERNATIONAL, 2001, 22 (01) : 53 - 63
  • [46] New insight and old dilemma: A cross-cultural comparison of Japan and the United States
    Lebra, TS
    CHILD DEVELOPMENT, 2000, 71 (05) : 1147 - 1149
  • [47] A Cultural Script for Suicide Among White Men in the Mountain West Region of the United States
    Pepper, Carolyn M.
    Dumas, Rachael E.
    Glenn, Lara E.
    Perry, Kandice M.
    Zeller, Gabriella M.
    Collins, Lauryn N.
    AMERICAN PSYCHOLOGIST, 2025, 80 (01) : 47 - 60
  • [48] A cross-cultural study of political advertising in the United States and Korea
    Tak, J
    Kaid, LL
    Lee, S
    COMMUNICATION RESEARCH, 1997, 24 (04) : 413 - 430
  • [49] TRANSLATION, CROSS-CULTURAL ADAPTATION AND VALIDATION OF THE "WOMEN SURVIVORS STUDY" FOR BRAZILIAN WOMEN SURVIVORS OF BREASTCANCER
    De Domenico, Edvane
    Okuma, Getulio
    Matsubara, Maria
    Bergerot, Cristiane
    Ashing, Kimlin
    ONCOLOGY NURSING FORUM, 2021, 48 (02)
  • [50] Prolonged Grief Symptoms among Suicide-Loss Survivors: The Contribution of Intrapersonal and Interpersonal Characteristics
    Levi-Belz, Yossi
    Ben-Yaish, Tamir
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH, 2022, 19 (17)