Sørensen Jane Brandt, Rheinländer Thilde, Sørensen Birgitte Refslund, Pearson Melissa, Agampodi Thilini, Siribaddana Sisira, Konradsen Flemming
Department of International Health, Immunology and Microbiology, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Department of Anthropology, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark.
BMJ Open. 2014 Oct 7;4(10):e005860. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2014-005860.
Sri Lanka has one of the highest suicide and self-harm rates in the world and although alcohol has been found to be a risk factor for self-harm in Sri Lanka, we know little about the connection between the two. This paper comprises a protocol for a qualitative study investigating alcohol's role in self-harm in rural Sri Lanka at three levels: the individual, community and policy level. The analysis will bring new understanding of the link between alcohol and self-harm in Sri Lanka, drawing on structural, cultural and social concepts. It will equip researchers, health systems and policy makers with vital information for developing strategies to address alcohol-related problems as they relate to self-harm.
To capture the complexity of the link between alcohol and self-harm in the Anuradhapura district in the North Central Province in Sri Lanka, qualitative methods will be utilised. Specifically, the data will consist of serial narrative life-story interviews with up to 20 individuals who have non-fatally self-harmed and where alcohol directly or indirectly was involved in the incidence as well as with their significant others; observations in communities and families; six focus group discussions with community members; and key-informant interviews with 15-25 stakeholders who have a stake in alcohol distribution, marketing, policies, prevention and treatment as they relate to self-harm.
The study has received ethical approval from the Ethical Review Committee of the Faculty of Medicine and Allied Sciences, Rajarata University of Sri Lanka. A sensitive data collection technique will be used and ethical issues will be considered throughout the study.
The results will be disseminated in scientific peer-reviewed articles in collaboration with Sri Lankan and other international research partners.
斯里兰卡是世界上自杀和自我伤害率最高的国家之一。尽管酒精已被发现是斯里兰卡自我伤害的一个风险因素,但我们对两者之间的联系知之甚少。本文包含一项定性研究方案,该研究在个体、社区和政策三个层面调查酒精在斯里兰卡农村地区自我伤害中的作用。分析将借鉴结构、文化和社会概念,为酒精与斯里兰卡自我伤害之间的联系带来新的理解。它将为研究人员、卫生系统和政策制定者提供重要信息,以制定解决与自我伤害相关的酒精问题的策略。
为了捕捉斯里兰卡中北部省阿努拉德普勒区酒精与自我伤害之间联系的复杂性,将采用定性方法。具体而言,数据将包括对多达20名曾有过非致命性自我伤害且酒精直接或间接与该事件有关的个人及其重要他人进行的系列叙事性生活故事访谈;对社区和家庭的观察;与社区成员进行的六次焦点小组讨论;以及与15 - 25名在与自我伤害相关的酒精分销、营销、政策、预防和治疗方面有利害关系的关键信息提供者进行的访谈。
该研究已获得斯里兰卡拉贾拉特大学医学与联合科学学院伦理审查委员会的伦理批准。将使用敏感的数据收集技术,并在整个研究过程中考虑伦理问题。
研究结果将与斯里兰卡和其他国际研究伙伴合作,发表在经过同行评审的科学文章中。