O'Donnell Shane, Richardson Noel, McGrath Aisling
National Centre for Men's Health, School of Science, South East Technological University (Carlow Campus), Kilkenny Road, Carlow, R93V960, Ireland.
Centre for Health Behaviour Research, School of Health Sciences, South East Technological University (Waterford Campus), Cork Road, Waterford, X91K0EK, Ireland.
Health Promot Int. 2025 Jan 17;40(1). doi: 10.1093/heapro/daae209.
This study sought to explore the relationship between sociodemographic-, mental health-, knowledge-, attitudinal-, and conformity to masculine norms variables with suicide literacy, suicide stigma, and help-seeking attitudes among men in a university setting (n = 471) in Ireland. Multiple linear regression with backward elimination was used to determine the independent variables associated with suicide literacy, suicide stigma, and help-seeking attitudes. Lower suicide literacy was associated with an ethnic minority background, living in a rural community, postgraduate students compared to undergraduate students, no depression symptoms in the past year, decreasing loneliness, greater suicide stigma, more negative help-seeking attitudes, lower resilience, greater conformity to the masculine norm power over women and lower conformity to the masculine norm emotional control. Greater suicide stigma was associated with a non-ethnic minority background, all departments of study compared to health and sports science, lower suicide literacy, more negative help-seeking attitudes, and greater conformity to the masculine norms of power over women, dominance, and heterosexual self-presentation. More negative help-seeking attitudes were associated with no generalized anxiety disorder symptoms in the past year, depression symptoms in the past year, greater suicide risk, lower suicide literacy, greater suicide stigma, greater resilience, and greater conformity to the masculine norms emotional control, self-reliance, violence, and heterosexual self-presentation. Findings highlight a need for gender-responsive psychoeducational programmes to target suicide literacy, suicide stigma, and/or help-seeking attitudes among men in university settings. They also highlight that such initiatives need to be co-produced alongside ethnic minority and rural-dwelling men to ensure they are culturally sensitive and acceptable.
本研究旨在探讨在爱尔兰一所大学环境中(n = 471),社会人口统计学、心理健康、知识、态度以及对男性规范的遵从等变量与男性的自杀素养、自杀 stigma 和求助态度之间的关系。采用向后逐步回归的多元线性回归来确定与自杀素养、自杀 stigma 和求助态度相关的自变量。较低的自杀素养与少数民族背景、居住在农村社区、研究生(与本科生相比)、过去一年无抑郁症状、孤独感降低、更大的自杀 stigma、更消极的求助态度、较低的心理韧性、对男性规范中对女性的权力的更高遵从以及对男性规范中情绪控制的较低遵从有关。更大的自杀 stigma 与非少数民族背景、所有学科(与健康和体育科学相比)、较低的自杀素养、更消极的求助态度以及对男性规范中对女性的权力、支配和异性自我呈现的更高遵从有关。更消极的求助态度与过去一年无广泛性焦虑症症状、过去一年有抑郁症状、更高的自杀风险、较低的自杀素养、更大的自杀 stigma、更大的心理韧性以及对男性规范中情绪控制、自力更生、暴力和异性自我呈现的更高遵从有关。研究结果强调需要开展针对性别的心理教育项目,以针对大学环境中男性的自杀素养、自杀 stigma 和/或求助态度。它们还强调,此类举措需要与少数民族和农村男性共同制定,以确保其具有文化敏感性和可接受性。