4.7 Article

Helping intentions toward suicidal people among young adults: Patterns, transitions, and influencing factors

Journal

JOURNAL OF AFFECTIVE DISORDERS
Volume 325, Issue -, Pages 611-617

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jad.2023.01.058

Keywords

Helping intentions; Suicide risk; Latent transition analysis; Longitudinal study; Suicide prevention

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This study conducted among young adults in Hong Kong aimed to identify categories of helping intentions toward suicidal people and understand the transitions between these categories over time. Three categories of helping intentions were found: dedicated helpers, willing helpers, and inconsistent helpers. About 73.48% of young adults remained in the same category across the two-year period. Gender and attitudes toward suicide victims were related to category membership and transitions between categories.
Background: Public involvement is an essential element of effective suicide prevention. However, few studies have investigated laypeople's intentions and behaviors in supporting suicidal people, especially within Chinese contexts. This study was conducted among young adults in Hong Kong to identify categories of helping intentions toward suicidal people, and to understand whether, and why, youth transitioned over time between helping intention categories.Methods: A total of 807 Hong Kong young adults (18-35 years) participated in this two-wave study across 2018 (W1) and 2019 (W2). Latent class analyses were conducted to identify categories of helping intentions toward suicidal people. A latent transition analysis was applied to explore the stability of the categories over time, and the factors that influenced stability.Results: Three categories were identified in both waves: 1) dedicated helpers (W1: 28.38 %, W2: 28.50 %), 2) willing helpers (W1: 30.24 %, W2: 33.83 %), and 3) inconsistent helpers (W1: 41.39 %, W2: 37.67 %). 73.48 % of the young adults stayed in the same category across two years. Gender, and attitudes toward suicide victims were related to category membership and transitions between categories. Limitations: Measurement of helping intentions may not be thorough. Further studies are required to examine whether the findings can be generalized to the other population.Conclusions: Effective community engagement is essential for suicide prevention. Young adults in Hong Kong exhibited different helping intentions toward suicidal people, that were moderately stable over a two-year period. Understanding how and why young adults behave differently toward suicidal people is important when planning effective suicide prevention programs.

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