What is it about?

We conducted a mixed-methods study to explore the characteristics of Chinese adolescents with suicidal ideation, using both quantitative and qualitative data and analysis. Participants were N = 244 adolescents, who completed self-report assessments of suicidal ideation, as well as indices of psychological functioning and well-being. A subset of n = 6 high and n = 6 low suicidal ideation adolescents participated in the follow-up interviews. Among the quantitative results, as compared with adolescents with low suicidal ideation, adolescents with high suicidal ideation reported significantly higher scores for stressful life events, coping-avoidant strategies, loneliness, and depression, as well as significantly lower scores for coping-approach strategies. Among the qualitative results, adolescents with high suicidal ideation demonstrated the following characteristics: (a) most troubled by academic pressures and relations, (b) negative self-evaluations, (c) maladaptive understanding of life and death, (d) individual-oriented attributions, and (e) negative coping strategies and self-fulfilling prophesy.

Featured Image

Why is it important?

These findings contribute to the early identification of adolescents who are at higher risk for suicide, further expand the stress and coping model with the distress-to-meaninglessness framework, and suggest that improving positive selfevaluation may be a focus of prevention and intervention.

Perspectives

The Distress-to-Meaninglessness Model (DMM) which the paper refer to is helpful for us to understand the path from stress to suicidal ideation.

Rongwei Zhang
Shanghai Normal University

Read the Original

This page is a summary of: The Characteristics of Chinese Adolescents With Suicidal Ideation: A Mixed-Methods Approach, Journal of Adolescent Research, August 2017, SAGE Publications,
DOI: 10.1177/0743558417723603.
You can read the full text:

Read

Contributors

The following have contributed to this page