Latefa Ali Dardas, PhD, PMHN, is Assistant Professor, The University of Jordan School of Nursing, and Vice President, The Psychological Sciences Association, Amman, Jordan. Malena M. Price, MScGH, is Doctoral Student, University of Miami, Florida. Joyell Arscott, PhD, RN, ACRN, is Postdoctoral Fellow, Johns Hopkins School of Nursing, Baltimore, Maryland. Ghada Shahrour, PhD, is Assistant Professor, Jordan University of Science and Technology School of Nursing, Irbid, Jordan. Sean Convoy, DNP, PMHNP-BC, is Assistant Professor and Lead Faculty Psychiatric-Mental Health Nurse Practitioner Program, Duke University School of Nursing, Durham, North Carolina.
Nurs Res. 2021 Jan/Feb;70(1):E1-E10. doi: 10.1097/NNR.0000000000000476.
Studies focusing on adolescent suicide in Arab countries are particularly scarce, with the few available undertaken from within an epidemiological paradigm.
This study aimed to understand Jordanian adolescents' perceptions, beliefs, and attitudes toward suicide.
A qualitative design using 12 dual-moderator focus group discussions was conducted in public schools. Participants were selected from the three main regions of the country (rural southern, urban central, and suburban northern). Participants included Jordanian adolescent boys and girls, aged 14-17 years, who reported experiencing mild to moderate depressive symptoms. A relational content analysis approach was used for coding data, and a content analysis was used to identify salient thematic categories. Data were analyzed using NVivo software.
Four themes emerged, including perceived risk factors, perceived protective factors, active and passive suicidal ideations, and e-games and Internet influences. Main risk factors were depression; anxiety; stigma, shame, and isolation; family issues; life pressures; and guilt. Conversely, religiosity, perceived positive family functioning, and availability of long-term goals seemed to confer resilience to adolescents' suicidal ideation and behavior. Passive suicidality (having death wishes without any plans to complete suicide) was noticed most among participants who feared jeopardizing the family's reputation if they committed suicide. Several boys with active suicidal ideations used the Blue Whale Challenge e-game to learn how to complete suicide and relinquish their problems.
Suicide is a multifactorial problem requiring multimodal strategies. Evidence from this research suggests that those most passionate about the outcome of interest are encouraged to redouble efforts to reduce modifiable risk factors, enrich protective factors, target the underlying psychiatric illness that informs suicidal ideations and behavior, and research the effect of social media and Internet activity more deeply. Parents are advised to monitor the online activities of their children and familiarize themselves with the digital applications they use.
专注于阿拉伯国家青少年自杀问题的研究特别少,为数不多的研究也是在流行病学范式内进行的。
本研究旨在了解约旦青少年对自杀的看法、信念和态度。
采用 12 组双主持人焦点小组讨论的定性设计,在公立学校进行。参与者来自该国的三个主要地区(南部农村、中部城市和北部郊区)。参与者包括报告有轻度至中度抑郁症状的 14-17 岁的约旦青少年男孩和女孩。采用关系内容分析法对数据进行编码,采用内容分析法确定突出的主题类别。使用 NVivo 软件分析数据。
出现了四个主题,包括感知到的风险因素、感知到的保护因素、主动和被动自杀意念以及电子游戏和互联网影响。主要风险因素包括抑郁、焦虑、耻辱感、孤立感、家庭问题、生活压力和内疚感。相反,宗教信仰、感知到的积极家庭功能以及长期目标的可用性似乎使青少年的自杀意念和行为具有韧性。被动自杀意念(有死亡愿望但没有任何自杀计划)在那些如果自杀就担心危及家庭声誉的参与者中最为常见。一些有主动自杀意念的男孩使用蓝鲸挑战电子游戏来学习如何完成自杀并放弃他们的问题。
自杀是一个多因素问题,需要采取多种模式策略。这项研究的证据表明,那些最关心研究结果的人应该加倍努力减少可改变的风险因素,丰富保护因素,针对导致自杀意念和行为的潜在精神疾病,并更深入地研究社交媒体和互联网活动的影响。建议家长监控孩子的在线活动,并熟悉他们使用的数字应用程序。