Affiliation:
1. Department of Psychological Sciences and Health University of Strathclyde Glasgow UK
2. Department of Public Health Sciences University of North Carolina at Charlotte Charlotte North Carolina USA
Abstract
AbstractObjectivesThe Integrated Motivational‐Volitional Model (IMV) of Suicide is growing in empirical support. The present study advances IMV research through two aims: (1) to qualitatively probe the subjective experiences of defeat, internal entrapment, and external entrapment, and (2) conducting a 3‐month prospective mediation analysis using quantitative and qualitative metrics of defeat and entrapment.MethodsThe study featured an online two‐point survey separated by 3 months. Participants were 255 adults living in the United Kingdom.ResultsPersons endorsing qualitative defeat and internal entrapment in their narratives also showed higher quantitative scores on corresponding IMV and suicide‐related self‐report scales. Internal entrapment mediated the effect of baseline defeat on 3‐month suicidal ideation, whereas external entrapment mediated the association of baseline defeat on 3‐month suicide attempt likelihood. Quantitative assessment of entrapment was more significantly associated with suicide attempts and ideation within mediation tests compared to corresponding qualitative variables.ConclusionsIMV model principles are largely supported by findings. Mediation results support further consideration of entrapment and defeat within clinical practice and public health‐focused suicide research. Understanding the complexity of entrapment narratives represents an important next step for conducting qualitative IMV‐focused research with minoritized and high‐risk suicide populations.
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Clinical Psychology
Cited by
1 articles.
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