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Living with suicidal thoughts

journal contribution
posted on 2013-09-01, 00:00 authored by Paul Dodemaide, Beth CrispBeth Crisp
Abstract: The dominant understandings of suicide have privileged the professional observations of health professionals and sociologists over the lived experiences of persons who have reported feeling suicidal. The current study explores what it is like to feel suicidal by examining comments posted voluntarily in an online forum. Adopting an inductive thematic analysis, a number of themes were uncovered which shed light on the following questions: Who has suicidal thoughts? What triggers suicidal thoughts? What is it like to feel suicidal? Also drawn from the data, was information relating to the types of treatments that people received, as well as ongoing survival strategies that people have relied on. The findings indicated people with suicidal thoughts form a heterogeneous group with mixed opinions about the causes of suicidal thoughts. The findings also highlighted a variety of experiences, descriptions and means for survival highlighting the depth of insight that those with first-hand experience have about suicidal thoughts, highlighting also the deep gap in knowledge and understanding in the existing literature about suicide and suicidal ideation. The recommendations for future direction in practice and research include, listening to, and valuing more, the voices and perspectives of suicidal people themselves.

History

Journal

Health sociology review

Volume

22

Issue

3

Pagination

308 - 317

Publisher

eContent Management

Location

Maleny, Qld.

ISSN

1446-1242

eISSN

1839-3551

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2013, eContent Management Pty Ltd.